Things Fall Apart is a notable literary work by Chinua Achebe. A complete discussion of this literary work is given, which will help you enhance your literary skills and prepare for the exam. Read the Main texts, Key info, Summary, Themes, Characters, Literary devices, Quotations, Notes, and various study materials of Things Fall Apart.
Brief Questions in Things Fall Apart
Ans: He was famed across the nine villages and beyond.
Ans: He was poor and a lifelong failure.
Ans: Unoka’s neighbour and a lender to him.
Ans: Wrestling fame, war prowess, and two titles.
Ans: It was powerful in war and magic.
Ans: Only with clear, just cases approved by the Oracle.
Ans: With a heavy, authoritarian hand.
Ans: Hating idleness and gentleness loved by Unoka.
Ans: He placed him with his senior wife.
Ans: For misfortune, disputes, futures, or ancestral counsel.
Ans: Even kings once nursed like babies.
Ans: Sternly, hiding affection behind hardness.
Ans: The priest of the earth goddess.
Ans: He prepared seed-yams for sowing.
Ans: To honour the earth goddess and ancestors.
Ans: He fired his rusty gun at her, missing.
Ans: She loved his wrestling glory and left her husband.
Ans: Priestess of Agbala, the Oracle.
Ans: Okafo won the wrestling match.
Ans: Tortoise tales, bird contests, Earth and Sky quarrels.
Ans: In the forest; Okonkwo struck the final blow.
Ans: Obierika’s young daughter.
Ans: Obierika’s son, the swift boy-wrestler.
Ans: She suffered from malaria.
Ans: A masked man impersonating a spirit.
Ans: Mgbafo’s brother.
Ans: She carried her to Agbala, silently.
Ans: He welcomed them with kola-nuts.
Ans: She gifted a cock and danced.
Ans: Three of the clan’s four titles.
Ans: Male crime: exile forever; female crime: seven years.
Ans: Warmly by his mother’s kinsmen.
Ans: To ease his despair and guide him.
Ans: A woman whose twins were always cast away.
Ans: How a “Roaring Flame” birthed so gentle a son.
Ans: The gods were dead; shrines would burn.
Ans: They shaved their hair and joined firmly.
Ans: “Crystal of Beauty,” like her mother.
Ans: A great man who debated faith with Mr Brown.
Ans: Future leaders would be the educated.
Ans: Devil’s lies; believers were unworthy.
Ans: Pay 250 bags of cowries for release.
Ans: He planned revenge if Umuofia chose war.
Ans: The Commissioner ordered the meeting to stop.
Ans: A great man, driven to it by whites.
Ans: They abandoned them in the Evil Forest.
Ans: He hangs himself.
Ans: Agbala, the Oracle of the Hills and Caves.
Ans: Yeats’s poem “The Second Coming.”
Ans: He played the flute beautifully.
Ans: His back never touched the ground.
Ans: A line from “The Second Coming.”
Ans: For poverty and unpaid debts.
Ans: A famed wrestler, unbeaten seven years.
Ans: A harvest feast honouring earth and ancestors.
Ans: Every year before the harvest.
Ans: Bridging reality and imagination in art.
Ans: Igbo villages—Umuofia, Mbanta—1890s Nigeria.
Ans: He died of swelling, an abomination.
Ans: Churchwomen were driven off and whipped.
Ans: Unoka had debts and no titles.
