'ANIMAL FARM' - WORKSHEET ON CHAPTER 5

A- VOCABULARY

oversleep
stroke
public-house
iron
sow
cabbage
canvass
liable to
improvement
windmill
graze
shed
impressive
chalk
sail
restive
complete
bleat
nonsense
whimper
jaws
heels
rear
previously
dismayed
articulate
bravery
obedience
watchword
flesh
warn
advocate
sly
cunning

B - WHO'S WHO ? WHAT'S WHAT?

"She appeared to be enjoying herself"
"A fat red-faced man"
"These two disagreed at every point where disagreement was possible."
"He was especially successful with the sheep."
"This would light the stalls and warm them in the winter."
"They wagged their tails to him in the same way as the other dogs had been used to do to Mr Jones."
"He fought bravely at the Battle of the Cowshed."
"And from then on he adopted the maxim, 'Napoleon is always right'. "

C- FIND OUT ...

where Snowball draws his inspiration from.
what Napoleon does about Snowball's plans.
How long it would take to build the windmill in Snowball's opinion.
A bone of contention between the two leaders.
What 'leadership' is not according to Squealer.
How often the animals assembled to receive their orders for the week.
Whose creation the windmill is. (at least this is what Squealer pretends ...)

D- FILL IN THE GAPS IN THIS SUMMARY OF THE CHAPTER

As .................... approaches, ...................., the vain little ...................., defects to the side of the .....................
The animals .................... the next season's work, with Napoleon and Snowball in continual .....................
Snowball creates a plan to build a .................... which could .................... enough power and energy to do much of the animals'.....................
He is on the point of .................... the animals' vote for the project, when Napoleon signals his bodyguard of .................... fierce .................... to chase Snowball off the .....................
Napoleon assumes sole command, abolishes ...................., and later claims the .................... of the windmill as his own.