Roald Dahl • Ages 6+ • KS2 • 45 questions

The Magic Finger KS2 Quiz (With Answers)

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Quiz Questions

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Q1 of 45

What is the Magic Finger?

  • A type of spell from a book
  • A power the narrator has to curse people when very angry
  • A special ring
  • A magical object she found

Q2 of 45

Who are the Gregg family?

  • The local farmers
  • The narrator's friends
  • The neighbours who love shooting and hunting
  • The narrator's parents

Q3 of 45

What does the narrator do to her teacher at school?

  • She gives her cat's whiskers when she is told off
  • She gives her wings
  • She makes her forget
  • She turns her into a cat

Q4 of 45

What happens to Mr and Mrs Gregg and their sons after the Magic Finger is used on them?

  • They disappear
  • They shrink and grow wings
  • They lose their memories
  • They grow huge

Q5 of 45

What do the Gregg family find in their garden — taking over their house?

  • Wild animals
  • Magic plants
  • A family of ducks who have become human-sized and taken over the Gregg house
  • Giant animals

Q6 of 45

What do the Gregg family have to sleep in that night?

  • The neighbours' house
  • A barn
  • A tent
  • A nest — the ducks' nest in the tree

Q7 of 45

What do the duck family point at the Greggs from the house window?

  • A sign
  • The Greggs' own guns
  • A mirror
  • Their wings

Q8 of 45

What does Mr Gregg promise to do at the end of the story?

  • Move away
  • Give the guns to the ducks
  • Never hunt again and destroy all their guns
  • Only hunt fish

Q9 of 45

What does the narrator do instead of hunting? What does she love?

  • Reading books
  • Drawing pictures
  • Looking at animals, especially the deer they would have shot
  • Fishing

Q10 of 45

Is the narrator's name given in the story?

  • No — she is unnamed
  • Yes — her name is Kate
  • Yes — her name is Lily
  • Yes — her name is Emma

Q11 of 45

What does Mr Gregg shoot in the opening scenes before the finger is used on him?

  • Ducks — the Gregg family shoot wild ducks together
  • deer — Mr Gregg has a licence to hunt deer on the nearby estate land
  • foxes — Mr Gregg hunts foxes that he blames for taking his chickens
  • rabbits — the Gregg family go rabbit shooting on the common every weekend

Q12 of 45

What is the length of The Magic Finger compared to other Dahl books?

  • It is one of the shortest
  • It is medium length
  • It is one of the longest
  • It is average length

Q13 of 45

How do the Gregg boys react when they wake up with wings?

  • They cry immediately
  • At first they are excited to fly, even though it is a strange situation
  • They are frightened
  • They try to remove them

Q14 of 45

What moral does the narrator state at the end?

  • Animals should be left alone
  • Children should not have powers
  • Magic should never be used
  • Be kind to your neighbours

Q15 of 45

Who else does the narrator use her Magic Finger on apart from the Greggs?

  • The farmer next door
  • Only the Greggs
  • Her parents
  • Her teacher (Miss Winter) before the main story

Q16 of 45

When does the girl's Magic Finger activate?

  • When she gets very angry
  • Whenever she touches cold water
  • Only on full moon nights
  • When she says a special word

Q17 of 45

What has she already done with her Magic Finger before the story begins?

  • She turned her teacher Mrs Winter into a cat for correcting her spelling
  • She turned a bully at school into a frog
  • She turned a mean dog into a fish
  • She accidentally turned herself invisible

Q18 of 45

What do the Gregg family like to do every weekend?

  • Cut down trees in the local forest
  • Go fishing in the river
  • Hunt wild ducks and other animals for sport
  • Trap animals and sell them

Q19 of 45

What does the Magic Finger do to the Gregg family?

  • It makes them unable to speak
  • It makes all their guns fall apart
  • It causes them to fall into a deep sleep for a week
  • It turns them into tiny people with wings while the ducks grow large and move into their house

Q20 of 45

What do the ducks do once they have the Gregg family's house?

  • They make the tiny Gregg family sleep in a bird's nest in a tree while they live in the house
  • They destroy the guns inside
  • They invite all the other local animals to a celebration
  • They call the police to report the Gregg family

Q21 of 45

What lesson do Mr and Mrs Gregg take from their experience?

  • They are angry and plan revenge
  • They are simply relieved to be back to normal and carry on as before
  • They report the strange events to the police
  • They understand what it is like to be small and hunted, and promise to stop hunting

Q22 of 45

What does the story suggest about the rights of animals?

  • That children understand animal rights better than adults
  • That animals can protect themselves if given the chance
  • That animals deserve to live free from being hunted for sport
  • That humans should stop eating meat entirely

Q23 of 45

How is the Magic Finger presented — as something controlled or uncontrollable?

  • She can choose when to use it but not what it does
  • It is completely under her control and she uses it deliberately
  • It is uncontrollable and she is frightened of it
  • It is partly uncontrollable

Q24 of 45

Why is the story told in first person?

  • To make the story more mysterious
  • To make it seem like a true story
  • So the reader sees events through the girl's eyes and understands her anger as natural and justified
  • To hide information that the reader only discovers at the end

Q25 of 45

What is Dahl's underlying message about hunting as a sport?

  • That children should challenge their parents' hobbies when they disagree with them
  • That animals and humans are equals and should be treated as such
  • That hunting for sport
  • That hunting is only acceptable if animals are not endangered

Q26 of 45

How old is the narrator in 'The Magic Finger'?

  • Eight — she is in the same class as the Gregg children
  • She is never given a specific age
  • Six
  • Ten

Q27 of 45

What does the Gregg family discover when they are tiny with wings?

  • That the ducks treat them with kindness
  • That the experience is exciting rather than frightening
  • That flying is wonderful and they do not want to change back
  • That being small and hunted is terrifying

Q28 of 45

What is notable about the style of this book compared to other Dahl stories?

  • It contains no adult characters at all
  • It is told entirely in verse
  • It is much longer than usual
  • It is very short and simple

Q29 of 45

What does the girl say at the end about the other family on the road?

  • That they also hunt and she has given them a warning
  • That she is pleased to have ended hunting in the area
  • That she will leave them alone unless they start hunting
  • That she has used the Magic Finger on them too

Q30 of 45

How does the story use the Greggs' experience to make its point about hunting?

  • By having characters deliver speeches about animal rights
  • By showing a wildlife expert explaining the damage hunting does
  • By letting the hunters experience the perspective of the hunted directly
  • By showing the suffering of the animals in graphic detail

Q31 of 45

The Magic Finger is explicitly a protest against hunting. How does Dahl use the transformation device to make a moral argument more effectively than a straightforward argument might?

  • Hunting stories are always moral
  • By making the hunters experience what it feels like to be hunted prey, Dahl creates empathy through lived experience
  • Transformation is entertaining, and
  • The moral is too simple

Q32 of 45

How does the perspective shift — humans becoming birds — function as an empathy exercise for the reader?

  • It is just a funny idea
  • Birds feel nothing
  • The perspective shift forces both characters and readers to inhabit the vulnerable position, creating genuine empathy for animals. Dahl uses fantasy as a mechanism for moral imagination
  • The shift is comic, and

Q33 of 45

The narrator is a young girl with extraordinary power. How does Dahl use her to challenge typical power dynamics in children's literature?

  • Young girls often have powers
  • A young girl with uncontrolled but morally directed power is atypical
  • She is a typical character
  • She is just the narrator

Q34 of 45

The ducks pointing guns at the Greggs is the story's most satirical moment. What makes this image so striking?

  • The reversal of the hunter-prey relationship is stark and satirical
  • It was an accident
  • Ducks aren't threatening
  • It is just funny

Q35 of 45

Mr Gregg changes his behaviour at the end. Is this change convincing? What does Dahl suggest about the possibility of moral transformation?

  • Dahl shows it won't last, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Dahl suggests that moral change requires experiencing consequences
  • Yes, completely convincing
  • The apparent depth here is illusory

Q36 of 45

How does the short length and simple style of the book affect its impact as a moral fable?

  • Brevity concentrates the moral
  • Simple stories are for young children, and
  • It should be longer
  • Shorter books have less impact

Q37 of 45

The Magic Finger was written in the 1960s. How does its anti-hunting message relate to broader changing attitudes toward animal welfare in Britain?

  • The message is universal regardless of era
  • The book emerged as animal welfare debates were growing in Britain
  • Hunting was not controversial then
  • Dahl was ahead of his time, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q38 of 45

The narrator's power activates when she is angry at injustice. What does Dahl suggest about righteous anger as a force for moral change?

  • Anger is sometimes useful
  • Anger is always bad
  • Anger is dangerous, and
  • Dahl validates anger directed at genuine injustice

Q39 of 45

Compare The Magic Finger to other fables in the tradition of role reversal (e.g. Aesop's 'The Hunter and the Dove'). What does Dahl add to this ancient device?

  • It has nothing in common
  • Dahl invented role reversal, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Dahl modernises the ancient device of role reversal with suburban British setting, contemporary detail (guns, houses) and first-person child narration, making the ancient moral immediately relevant
  • Fables are all the same

Q40 of 45

Why does Dahl give the narrator no name? What is the effect of her anonymity?

  • It was an oversight
  • The story is too short for names
  • Anonymity makes her universal
  • Names weren't important

Q41 of 45

The transformation makes the Gregg boys momentarily delighted by flying before fear sets in. What does this complicate in the moral message?

  • The boys' delight at flying introduces ambiguity
  • The boys are silly, and
  • It complicates nothing
  • Dahl made a mistake, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q42 of 45

How does the domestic British suburban setting — gardens, neighbours, ordinary houses — enhance rather than undermine the magical elements of the story?

  • The setting should be magical
  • The setting reduces the magic
  • Ordinary settings make magic more powerful
  • Dahl needed a foreign setting, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q43 of 45

The Greggs don't apologise to the narrator or to animals — they simply promise to stop. Is this enough? What does the absence of apology suggest about Dahl's view of moral restitution?

  • An apology would have been better
  • The Greggs were not wrong
  • Dahl focuses on changed behaviour rather than stated remorse
  • The apparent depth here is illusory

Q44 of 45

If you were writing a sequel, what might happen if Mr Gregg broke his promise? What does considering this reveal about the story's resolution?

  • The possibility of broken promises reveals the story's resolution is pragmatic rather than guaranteed
  • Sequels are not relevant
  • He would never break his promise, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Sequels are always bad

Q45 of 45

This is one of Dahl's most overtly political books. Does overt politics strengthen or weaken it as a children's story?

  • Children don't understand politics
  • Politics makes it worse
  • Politics should be hidden
  • Overt moral purpose gives the story clarity and passion

All Answers

  1. Q1: A power the narrator has to curse people when very angry
  2. Q2: The neighbours who love shooting and hunting
  3. Q3: She gives her cat's whiskers when she is told off
  4. Q4: They shrink and grow wings
  5. Q5: A family of ducks who have become human-sized and taken over the Gregg house
  6. Q6: A nest — the ducks' nest in the tree
  7. Q7: The Greggs' own guns
  8. Q8: Never hunt again and destroy all their guns
  9. Q9: Looking at animals, especially the deer they would have shot
  10. Q10: No — she is unnamed
  11. Q11: Ducks — the Gregg family shoot wild ducks together
  12. Q12: It is one of the shortest
  13. Q13: At first they are excited to fly, even though it is a strange situation
  14. Q14: Animals should be left alone
  15. Q15: Her teacher (Miss Winter) before the main story
  16. Q16: When she gets very angry
  17. Q17: She turned her teacher Mrs Winter into a cat for correcting her spelling
  18. Q18: Hunt wild ducks and other animals for sport
  19. Q19: It turns them into tiny people with wings while the ducks grow large and move into their house
  20. Q20: They make the tiny Gregg family sleep in a bird's nest in a tree while they live in the house
  21. Q21: They understand what it is like to be small and hunted, and promise to stop hunting
  22. Q22: That animals deserve to live free from being hunted for sport
  23. Q23: It is partly uncontrollable
  24. Q24: So the reader sees events through the girl's eyes and understands her anger as natural and justified
  25. Q25: That hunting for sport
  26. Q26: Eight — she is in the same class as the Gregg children
  27. Q27: That being small and hunted is terrifying
  28. Q28: It is very short and simple
  29. Q29: That they also hunt and she has given them a warning
  30. Q30: By letting the hunters experience the perspective of the hunted directly
  31. Q31: By making the hunters experience what it feels like to be hunted prey, Dahl creates empathy through lived experience
  32. Q32: The perspective shift forces both characters and readers to inhabit the vulnerable position, creating genuine empathy for animals. Dahl uses fantasy as a mechanism for moral imagination
  33. Q33: A young girl with uncontrolled but morally directed power is atypical
  34. Q34: The reversal of the hunter-prey relationship is stark and satirical
  35. Q35: Dahl suggests that moral change requires experiencing consequences
  36. Q36: Brevity concentrates the moral
  37. Q37: The book emerged as animal welfare debates were growing in Britain
  38. Q38: Dahl validates anger directed at genuine injustice
  39. Q39: Dahl modernises the ancient device of role reversal with suburban British setting, contemporary detail (guns, houses) and first-person child narration, making the ancient moral immediately relevant
  40. Q40: Anonymity makes her universal
  41. Q41: The boys' delight at flying introduces ambiguity
  42. Q42: Ordinary settings make magic more powerful
  43. Q43: Dahl focuses on changed behaviour rather than stated remorse
  44. Q44: The possibility of broken promises reveals the story's resolution is pragmatic rather than guaranteed
  45. Q45: Overt moral purpose gives the story clarity and passion
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