Quiz on the fables of I.A. Krylov, presentation for a reading lesson (grade 3) on the topic


Literary quiz based on the fables of I.A. Krylov

1 round

“The moral of this fable is this” What fable had such a moral?

Teams answer in turns, each correct answer is worth 1 point.

  1. The ignoramus, also in blindness, scolds science and learning And all scientific works, Not feeling that he is eating their fruits A pig under an oak tree)
  2. When there is no agreement among the comrades, their business will not go well, and nothing will come out of it, only torment. (Swan, Cancer, and Pike)
  3. Unfortunately, the same thing happens with people: No matter how useful a thing is, without knowing its value, the ignoramus tends to make his sense of it worse; And if the ignorant is more knowledgeable, then he also persecutes her. (Monkey and glasses)
  4. The powerful are always to blame for the powerless. (Wolf and Lamb)
  5. God save us from such judges (Donkey and Nightingale)
  6. No one likes to recognize themselves in satire (The Monkey and the Glasses)
  7. It often happens to us that we see labor and wisdom there, where we just have to guess and just get down to business. (Larchik)
  8. The ignorant judge exactly like this: Anything they don’t understand is of no use to them. (Rooster and Pearl Seed)

Round 2

Chest

What fable is this item from?

Teams answer in turns, each correct answer is worth 1 point.

  1. Acorn
  2. Cheese
  3. Notes
  4. Glasses
  5. Grape
  6. Pearl grain
  7. Barrel (Two barrels)
  8. Snare, trap

Round 3

Idioms

Many phrases from the fables of I.A. Krylov became winged. We often say “The casket just opened” or “And Vaska listens and eats,” without even thinking that these words were first uttered by Krylov’s heroes. Krylov has a lot of such phrases that have become catchphrases.

What fable is the catchphrase taken from?

  • Teams answer in turns, each correct answer is worth 1 point.
  1. It's your fault that I want to eat Wolf and Lamb)
  2. The fool who listens to all human lies is a lie. (Monkey and glasses)
  3. To be a musician, you need skill. (Quartet)
  4. Know that she is strong, that she barks at the Elephant (Elephant and Pug)
  5. I have known your wolf nature for a long time (Wolf in the kennel)
  6. Although the eye can see, the tooth is numb. (Fox and grapes)
  7. Does the Cuckoo praise the Rooster? Because he praises the Cuckoo. (Cuckoo and Rooster)
  8. It is better to sing well with a goldfinch, Than poorly with a nightingale (Starling)

Round 4

“Earrings for all sisters”

Match the character traits with the characters in Krylov’s fables.

Students receive 18 cards, each with one word written on it. The maximum score - 3 points - is given for the speed and correctness of the answer. Words on cards:

  1. Cheater, envious, prankster, cruelty, hard work, frivolity, ingratitude, skill, wisdom.
  2. Fox, Frog, Monkey, Wolf, Ant, Dragonfly, Pig, Nightingale, Raven

Round 5

“Who’s telling who?”

Name the heroes of the fable?

The team that raised the flag first has the right to respond. The correct answer is worth 2 points.

  1. Did you sing everything? This is the thing: So go and dance!
  2. How dare you, insolent one, with your unclean snout, muddy My pure drink with sand and silt? (Wolf to Lamb)
  3. “My dear, how beautiful! What a neck, what eyes! Telling fairy tales, really! What feathers! what a sock! And, truly, there must be an angelic voice!
  4. Neighbor, stop being ashamed, should you bother with the Elephant? (Mongrel Moske)
  5. After all, this harms the tree, - If you expose the roots, it may dry out (Raven to the Pig)
  6. “Listen, buddy! You, they say, are a great master of singing. I would really like to judge for myself, having heard your singing, how great is your skill?” (Donkey to Nightingale)
  7. You are gray, and I, my friend, am gray (dog to the Wolf in the kennel)
  8. “Why should godmothers work hard? Isn’t it better to turn on yourself, godmother?” (Bear to the Monkey)
  9. "Friends! Even though you become hoarse, praising each other, - All your music is bad!..” (Sparrow to the Cuckoo and the Rooster)
  10. “Isn’t it a shame,” he says, “in broad daylight, I got caught!” If they hadn’t tricked me like that: I can confidently vouch for that” (Dove Chizhu)

Round 6

"Morality in a Picture"

Guess the fable from the picture.

Each team has 1 picture.

For the correct answer - 1 point

  1. Wolf and Lamb
  2. Quartet
  3. Monkey and glasses
  4. Demyanova's ear

earring sisters assessment sheet pictures of Krylov's fables

Quiz on the fables of I.A. Krylov, presentation for a reading lesson (grade 3) on the topic

Slide 1

Topic: “Fables of I.A. Krylov”

Slide 2

Ivan Andreevich Krylov (1769 – 1844)

Slide 3

The future famous writer was born on February 2, 1769 in the family of an army officer. The family was poor, and Vanya Krylov was not able to receive a good education in childhood; he learned to read and write in the family. When Ivan Krylov was ten years old, his father died. After him there was nothing left - no money, no other valuables, only a chest with books. Ivan Andreevich began his literary activity as a playwright. He wrote 13 plays, they were published and staged in the theater. Krylov began writing fables later; they first appeared in print in 1806, when Krylov was already 37 years old. Everyone immediately liked them. Many were surprised by the strange name with which they were signed: “Navi Volyrk”. But if you read the name from right to left, everything will immediately become clear.

Slide 4

The first book of fables was published in 1809.

Slide 5

Awards On March 27, 1820, Krylov was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree. On January 12, 1823, the Russian Academy awarded I.A. Krylov gold medal.

Slide 6

Monument to I.A. Krylov

Slide 7

In the Summer Garden, on the site in front of the Tea House, there is a monument to the great Russian fabulist I. A. Krylov, created by the sculptor P. Klodt with private donations. The monument to Krylov was unveiled in a solemn ceremony on May 12, 1855. The pedestal of the monument is a granite cube, completely covered with bas-reliefs depicting scenes from 36 Krylov fables. If you look closely at the pedestal, you can see on it the heroes of the fables “Quartet”, “The Fox and the Grapes”, “The Monkey and the Glasses” and many others. The monument is surrounded by a fence designed to prevent damage to the bas-reliefs. The fence, made in the eclectic style fashionable for the mid-19th century, was installed 20 years after the opening of the monument.

Slide 8

What is a Fable? A fable is a short work written in verse or prose, in which the vices and shortcomings of people are ridiculed - cunning, lies, flattery, greed, stupidity, etc. Fables usually feature animals, in which we easily recognize people. The fable begins or ends with a moral - a conclusion, a lesson, where the meaning of the fable is explained.

Slide 10

Last years Ivan Andreevich Krylov died on November 9, 1844. Everyone believed that he died from gluttony, but in fact from double pneumonia. He was buried on November 13, 1844 at the Tikhvin Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. On the day of the funeral, friends and acquaintances of I.A. Krylov, along with an invitation, received a copy of the fables he published, on the title page of which, under a mourning border, was printed: “An offering in memory of Ivan Andreevich, at his request.”

Slide 11

The popularity of Krylov's fables was enormous during the poet's lifetime. I.A. Krylov wrote more than 200 fables. They were memorized and retold, laughing, by military generals, soldiers, minor officials, and even Emperors Alexander I and Nicholas II read them. Why? Because in these fables there are lessons for everyone: the learned, the unlearned, the military, the merchant, the poor and the rich - they all see themselves here as in a mirror. After all, although roosters, nightingales, wolves and other animals act in fables, everyone understands that under their guise there are people with their own characters and deeds.

Slide 12

Quiz game

Slide 13

Competition “Name the Fables” Fables about the fox: “The Crow and the Fox”, “The Fox and the Grapes”, “The Wolf and the Fox”, “The Good Fox”, “The Fox”, “The Fox and the Donkey”

Slide 14

Fables about the wolf: “The Wolf and the Lamb” “The Wolf in the Kennel” “The Lion and the Wolf” “The Wolf and the Mouse” “The Wolf and the Shepherds” “The Wolf and the Crane”

Slide 15

Fables about the Bear: “Quartet” “The Bear with the Bees” “The Hermit and the Bear” “The Hardworking Bear” “The Peasant and the Worker”

Slide 16

Fables about the Monkey: “The Mirror and the Monkey” “The Monkey and the Glasses” “The Monkey” “Quartet”

Slide 17

Competition “Name the Hero” Who said these words? “My dear, how beautiful! Well, what a neck, what eyes!” (Fox. “The Crow and the Fox”) “How dare you, impudent one, with your unclean snout here muddy My pure drink With sand and silt? For such insolence I will rip your head off" (Wolf. "The Wolf and the Lamb")

Slide 18

“A casket with a secret, So, it doesn’t have a lock. And I undertake to open it; yes, yes, I'm sure of it; Don't laugh so secretly! I’ll find the secret and open the casket to you: In mechanics, I’m worth something too” (Mechanic is a sage. “Casket”) “Wait! How should the music go? After all, you’re not sitting like that” (Monkey. “Quartet” “Tell me, gossip, what kind of passion do you have for stealing chickens?!” (Peasant. “The Peasant and the Fox”)

Slide 19

Competition “Whose words are these?” To whom are these words addressed? “Neighbor, stop being ashamed,” Shavka says to her, “are you bothering with an elephant?!” (To Moska. “Elephant and Moska”) “Pretty much,” he says, it’s not difficult to say, I can listen to you without getting bored, But it’s a pity that you are unfamiliar with our rooster, If only you’d become more alert, if only you could learn a little from him.” (To the Nightingale, “The Donkey and the Nightingale”)

Slide 20

“After all, this is harming the tree,” the raven says to her with Oak, “If you expose the roots, it may dry out” (To the Pig, “Pig under the Oak”) “Neighbor, I’m fed up” (To Demyan. “Demyan’s ear”) “ Listen,” he says, “if you are not smarter, then insolence will not always pass over you easily. This time God will forgive; but beware ahead And know who to joke with!” (To the Boy. “The Boy and the Snake”)

Slide 21

Competition “The moral of this fable is this” - Which fable had such a moral? “How many times have they told the world that flattery is vile and harmful; but everything is not for the future, And a flatterer will always find a corner in the heart" ("The Crow and the Fox") "It's a disaster if the shoemaker starts baking pies, And the cake maker starts making boots: And things won't go well" ("Pike and the Cat")

Slide 22

“It often happens to us that we see both labor and wisdom there, where you just have to guess and just get down to business” (“Larchik”) “Forward to someone else’s misfortune, don’t laugh, Dove!” (“Siskin and Dove”) “When there is no agreement among the comrades, their business will not go well, and nothing will come out of it, only torment” (“Swan, Pike, Cancer”)

Slide 23

Competition “Winged Words” Many phrases from I.A. Krylov’s fables have become winged words. We often say them, without even thinking that these words were first uttered by the heroes of I.A. Krylov. Remember them and name the fables from which these lines are: “Yes, only the cart is still there” (“Swan, Pike and Cancer”) “The strong are always to blame for the powerless” (“Wolf and Lamb”) “There is no stronger beast than a cat” (“Wolf and Lamb”) Mouse and Rat") “And the casket just opened” (“Casket”) “And Vaska listens and eats” (“Cat and Cook”)

Slide 24

Sources of information: https://www.kostyor.ru/images0/biogr/krylov.jpg https://spbfoto.spb.ru/foto/data/media/4/kryl2.jpg https://upload.wikimedia.org /wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c8/Krylov_Grave_Summer.jpg/450px-Krylov_Grave_Summer.jpg https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6e/Patrponds.jpg https://upload.wikimedia.org /wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2a/Krylov_summer_garden.jpg/450px-Krylov_summer_garden.jpg https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9A%D1%80%D1%8B%D0%BB%D0 %BE%D0%B2,_%D0%98%D0%B2%D0%B0%D0%BD_%D0%90%D0%BD%D0%B4%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B5%D0 %B2%D0%B8%D1%87 https://voicebook.ru/uploads/posts/2009-09/1254318710_2.jpg https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/RR5110-0002R .gif https://www.kids-price.ru/contentimg/pic505/size1/dvd_821070.jpg https://s45.radikal.ru/i110/0902/b7/9125a044d857.jpg https://darjakaisa.ru/ uploads/posts/2009-10/1254487565_111.jpg https://read.ru/covers_rr/b/68/86/78668.jpg https://i019.radikal.ru/0908/4f/a271a91c2ef0.jpg https:/ /muzon.org/uploads/posts/2009-01/1233265689_basni.jpg https://dic.academic.ru/pictures/enc_literature/i_305.jpg https://www.proza.ru/pics/2011/04/05 /1426.jpg https://school.covcheg.org/uploads/posts/2008-02/1203184272_3b_krylov_kvartet.gif https://sales-books.by.ru/images/big/krilov/krilov01.jpg https:// img.labirint.ru/images/books4/168657/scrn_big_1.jpg https://www.foxdesign.ru/fox/img/fox03b.jpg https://www.uchmag.ru/upload/catalog/posob/_/ v/_v-77_cover_image.jpeg https://dic.academic.ru/pictures/enc_literature/i_052.jpg

Quiz on the works of I.A. Krylov

KRYLOVSKAYA QUIZ

► Where did little Ivan Krylov learn to read and write, arithmetic and prayers? a) At the lyceum; b) At the boarding house; c) In a parochial school; d) At home.

(His father was a great lover of reading, after him a whole chest of books passed to his son.)

► In what capacity did Ivan Andreevich Krylov begin his literary career? a) Criticism;

b) Playwright;

c) Translator;

d) Fantasta. (But he became famous for his fables.)

► What literary pseudonym did Ivan Andreevich Krylov have? a) A person without a spleen; b) Navi Volyrk;

c) My brother's brother;
d) Antosha Chekhonte. (To be sure, read this pseudonym from right to left. And the other three pseudonyms belonged to A.P. Chekhov.)
► In work on which work of A.S. Pushkin was greatly helped by the childhood memories of the fabulist I.A. Krylov, the son of a military officer? a) “Prisoner of the Caucasus”; b) “Poltava”; c) “The Captain's Daughter”;

d) “The Bronze Horseman.”
(Krylov was an eyewitness to the siege of Orenburg by E. Pugachev’s troops.)
► Who was Ivan Andreevich Krylov NOT? a) Playwright; b) Journalist; c) a fabulist; d) An artist.

► What was the name of Krylov’s first work, written by him at the age of 15? a) “Coffee shop”;

b) “Sugar Bowl”;
c) “Sugar bowl”; d) "Thrush". (It was a comic opera.)
► How many fables were written by I.A. Krylov? a) About 50; b) About 100; c) About 150; d) About 200.

► What was the name of the last fable written by I.A. Krylov? a) “Nobleman”;

b) “Funeral”; c) “The aged lion”; d) "Poor rich man."

► Why in 1820 I.A. Krylov received the Order of St. Vladimir 4th degree? a) For the publication of 6 volumes of fables; b) For compiling a catalog of Russian books;

c) Sound writing of the opera “Ilya the Bogatyr”;
d) For journalistic activities. (Ivan Andreevich Krylov worked in the Imperial Public Library since 1812, first as a “librarian’s assistant” and then as a librarian of the Russian department. He served in the Public Library for almost 30 years.) ►
Who is the author of the monument to I.A. Krylov in the Summer Garden of St. Petersburg? a) E.P. Falcone; b) P.K. Klodt;

c) I.P.
Vitali; d) A.M. Opekushin. (Klodt installed a bronze statue of the fabulist on a granite pedestal, decorated with bronze images of people and animals - characters from Krylov’s fables. The monument is one of the first monuments to Russian writers and the first installed in St. Petersburg. The monument to Krylov was the last major work of the famous animal sculptor.)
► How many Ivan Krylov's fables are shown by the sculptor Klodt on the pedestal of the monument to the fabulist in the Summer Garden? a) Five; b) Twelve; c) Twenty four; d) Thirty-six.
(Bronze figures of animals, depicted in high relief, completely fill the entire pedestal, they dazzle the eyes; because of this crowding, it is sometimes difficult to understand the characters and scenes of the fables.)
► On what famous monument can you see the figure of the writer I.A. Krylova? a) “Millennium of Russia”;

b) “Motherland”;
c) “Alexander’s Column”; d) "Tsar Bell". (This is a monument erected in Veliky Novgorod in 1862 in honor of the thousandth anniversary of the legendary calling of the Varangians to Russia.)
► What musical instrument did the fabulist Krylov masterfully play? a) Violin;

b) Accordion;
c) Pipe; d) Organ. (Ivan Andreevich Krylov wrote his fable about the Monkey, the Donkey, the Goat and the clubfooted Bear, who “planned to play a quartet,” with full knowledge of the performing arts: he was a virtuoso violinist and fabulist. Krylov performed as a second violinist in the ensemble quite often. But he He also gave solo concerts, performing the most complex violin works.)
► On the day of the fiftieth anniversary of the creative activity of Ivan Andreevich Krylov, Pyotr Vyazemsky called him what we all still call him. How? a) The sun of Russian poetry; b) Uncle Vanya; c) Grandfather Krylov;

d) Aesop's son.

► Which of the proposed phraseological units did NOT come from the fables of I.A. Krylova? a) And the casket simply opened; b) I didn’t even notice the elephant; c) And Vaska listens and eats; d) Stay with nothing. (From “The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish” by A.S. Pushkin.)

► Which of the proposed names of literary works is NOT the name of Krylov’s fable? a) “Elephant and Radio”;

b) “Elephant and Moska”; c) “Elephant in the Voivodeship”;

d) “An elephant in the case.” (This is a story by Victor Dragunsky.)

► Which expression from Krylov’s fable has become a saying about disunity and things standing still? a) And the cart is still there;

b) Though the eye sees, the tooth numbs;
c) And Vaska listens and eats; d) A disservice. (From the fable “Swan, Pike and Cancer.”)
► Which bird in Krylov’s fable “boasted that it wanted to burn the sea”? a) Crow;

b) Tit;

c) Rooster;

d) Swan.

► How did the Krylov monkey become weak in old age? a) Ears;

b) Teeth; c) With legs;

d) With the eyes.

► Which of these animals was NOT part of I.A.’s fable quartet? Krylova? a) Fox;

b) Goat; c) Bear;

d) Donkey.

► Which bird judged the heroes of Krylov’s fable “Quartet”? a) Rooster; b) Crow; c) Nightingale;

d) Tit.

► In which of these fables by I.A. Krylov's fox fighting for a piece of cheese? a) “Wolf and Fox”;

b) “The Crow and the Fox”;

c) “The Fox and the Eagle”;

d) “The Fox and the Marmot.”

► On which tree did Krylov’s Crow sit down, getting ready to have breakfast? a) On an oak tree;

b) On a birch tree; c) On spruce;

d) On a beech. ("A Crow and a fox".)

► Which fable by Krylov stated that “flattery is vile and harmful”?
a) “The Cuckoo and the Rooster”; b) “The Crow and the Fox”;
c) “Elephant and Moska”; d) “Dragonfly and Ant.”

► Who advised the Nightingale to learn singing from the Donkey from the fable by I.A. Krylova? a) In a starling;

b) At the rooster;

c) At the lark;

d) At the cuckoo's.

► Why did Foka overeat in Ivan Krylov’s fable? a) Blinov; b) Pirogov; c) Fish soup;

d) Cabbage soup.
(“Demyanov’s ear.”)
► What insect did Ivan Krylov call the jumper in his fable? a) Butterfly;

b) Dragonfly;

c) flea;

d) Locusts. (“Dragonfly and Ant.”)

► Where, according to the text of I.A. Krylov’s fable, was the Elephant taken? a) Along the streets;

b) According to prospectuses; c) Along the boulevards; d) By china shops.

► What is the name of one of I.A.’s fables? Krylova?

a) “Rich poor man”; b) “Poor rich man”;

c) “Thin fat man”; d) "Evil good man."

► From which fable by I.A. Krylov’s catchphrase “Eat with your eyes” “fluttered out”? a) “Wolf in the kennel”;

b) “The Cat and the Cook”; c) “The Fox and the Grapes”;

d) “The Crow and the Fox.” (“With his eyes, it seems like he would like to eat them all.”)

►Who did the dog Moska bark at in Ivan Krylov’s fable? a) On a bear;

b) On a cat; c) On the elephant;

d) To the moon.

► What, according to I. Krylov’s fable, were the Swan, Cancer and Pike NOT able to move? a) Stone;

b) Horse; c) Woz;

d) Carriage.

► Under what tree was the Pig rummaging in I.A.’s fable? Krylova? a) Spruce;

b) Oak;

c) Linden;

d) Apple tree.

► Which fable by Krylov will help you easily remember the composition of a string quartet? a) “Swan, Shuka and Cancer”; b) “The Nobleman and the Poet”; c) “Quartet”;

d) “Peacock and Nightingale.”
(“Quartet.” “We got the notes, the bass, the viola, two violins...” Then the cello was called the bass.)
► What is the name of the painting by P.A. Fedotov, written on the plot of the fable of the same name by I.A. Krylova? a) “The Picky Bride”;

b) “Major’s Matchmaking”; c) “Fresh gentleman”; d) “The poor girl’s beauty is like a death’s scythe.”

► Which animal appears only once in I. Krylov’s fables? a) Bear;

b) Hare; c) Fox;

d) Wolf. (Fable “Hare on the hunt.”)

► In what fable related to the Patriotic War of 1812, Ivan Krylov argues that the fight against Napoleon should be waged with weapons, and not with diplomatic exhortations? a) “Demyanov’s ear”;

b) “The Cat and the Cook”;

c) “The Fox and the Grapes”;

d) “The Crow and the Fox.”

► In which fable by I.A. Krylov writes about Napoleon's attempt to make peace? a) “Wolf in the kennel”;

b) “Pig under the oak tree”; c) “The Monkey and the Glasses”;

d) “Dragonfly and Ant.”

► What a fable by I.A. Krylova concerns the strategy and tactics of Kutuzov in the Patriotic War of 1812? a) “Swan, crayfish and pike”;

b) “Quartet”; c) “Wagon train”;

d) “Dragonfly and Ant.” (By the image of a “good horse,” Krylov meant Kutuzov with his caution and restraint in repelling the Napoleonic invasion.)

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