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Quizzes for Eleventh Grade
Grade 11 / 11th Grade
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FunTrivia has been the #1 source for online quizzes for over 20 years. The quizzes below are perfect for use by teachers, home-schoolers, parents, and students of roughly grade 11 level.About our Quizzes: Notes for Teachers and Parents
This quiz is in response to an author challenge. Just match the event with the date on which it began. It covers a wide range of categories. Have fun and good luck!
Madness - real or faked - seems to be a recurring theme in Shakespeare's plays. While not all of the characters featured in this quiz can be said to have gone insane in a clinical sense, they indeed exhibit various kinds of bizarre behaviour.
Health is a major theme in the 'Chalet School' books, and many doctors appear throughout the series - some of them even end up marrying pupils! Can you guess who's who?
Some English words are entirely too much like others, while having completely different meanings. How many of these too-similar words can you properly sort?
Many of the world's countries have adopted a bird as one of their national symbols. To explore this topic, here's a match quiz inspired by Kyleisalive's Christmas 2017 challenge.
Let's zip our way through cities, towns and villages in the USA that have someone's first name. There are clues to help you match them up with their state.
All of the people in the quiz have been either heralded as heroes or villified as rogues in one way or another. I'll give you a bit of biography, you choose the person's name. The quiz covers a range of quiz categories.
Most of the United States presidents have had pets during their life in politics. Some more than one, some could have opened a zoo. From the list of pets I give you, pick the correct president.
Much of the terminology that relates to how a piece of music is performed is taken from the Italian language. In this quiz, we'll look at some of these terms and their effects.
My young grandson loves to earn money for his piggy bank! I believe that if he is old enough to know how to count money, he is old enough to learn a bit about the people whose images are on the currency! See if you can match them up with a nickname.
Long before Europeans arrived, Aboriginal nations made the Australian land their home. This quiz focuses on Indigenous Australians before Europeans arrived, but some of them have descendants who continue the beliefs and practices of their ancestors.
A second edition of an earlier quiz. I will give you the chemical name and its formula - you find the matching 'common' name of something we all likely know and use.
There are a myriad of chess openings out there. Some of them have been named after countries, regions and cities. In this quiz we'll get to know 10 of them.
I'm an English major so these words are everyday jargon, but for everyone else words like 'iambic' or 'assonance' are near worthless and banal. Let's make things a bit more interesting. You probably know more than you think!
A boating trip on the Thames sounds a delightful prospect! But first of all we need to go shopping for a few essentials, just be careful what you ask for...or face the consequences.
Jane Austen's characters occasionally travelled to real-life locations in England. Can you match up the events that occurred in one of these places with the novel in which they appeared or were mentioned?
Although its name might suggest otherwise, a flying fox is not a fox that can fly. Here are some animals with decidedly misleading names. Do you know what they really are?
You don't need to have gone to the University of Oxford to be able to match these famous roads with their countries of origin. I've provided an extra fact about each road which may help you on your way.
Have you ever imagined what an important role acids and bases play in our daily lives. Brush up your knowledge on these important chemicals and their common uses.
Panda Tim has been visiting his friends around the world, and he says "good-bye" to them in their native language when he leaves. Can you identify the language?
This quiz was published in 2005. I made it into a 50/50 quiz: you only have to decide between two choices. I'll give you a line from a work of literature and you pick the correct one from which it came. Good Luck!
Yours or mine? Well, sometimes it's no one's fault! I hope you enjoy this faulty quiz...er...this quiz full of faults! Hmmm. I hope you enjoy this quiz!
The first nine creatures featured in this quiz can be found somewhere on the continent of Africa. In the tenth question you will use them to identify some birds that they might be familiar with!
Countries, nations, states, republics, federated republics, dependencies, etc, etc, etc. What does it all mean? Which is what? Along with a few world oddities mixed in.
Some of my friends and I are going on a tour to visit some interesting and amazing places on our planet, so come and join us. Just pick where we are. Good luck.
Most animal types have a collateral adjective that describes them which is not derived from their common English name. Can you match the adjective to the animal in these cases?
The word "hot" can mean many things, but one of the most potentially dangerous definitions of it is radioactive and that's what this quiz is all about - radioactivity and our lives.
We can see animals from around the world in zoos, but many species are native to quite small parts of the world. Can you tell in which country you could see these ten in the wild?
There are not many women in Shakespeare's plays, although in some they play a very important part. In Shakespeare's day the parts of women were played by boys. I give you the woman. You name the play.
This quiz will look at the science of sound used in concert halls or theaters, the science of acoustical physics. Don't fret though, we'll keep this quite simple.