Name:______________________________________

Date:________________

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Matching Practice: Worksheet


Match each term to it's sentence.





- expense - - prudent - - heed - - thistle - - ruffle - - fiddler - - fiddle - - sentry - - barbarian - - phantasm -




“Curse you for a ____ dog!” spluttered Rabadash.

This was because, not daring to go more than ten miles from Tashbaan, he could never go on a war himself; and he didn’t want his Tarkaans to win fame in the wars at his ____, for that is the way Tisrocs get overthrown.

“No. The King’s under the law, for it’s the law makes him a king. Hast no more power to start away from thy crown than any ____ from his post.”

You shall have every comfort which your Highness’s situation allows: the best cattle-boats—the freshest carrots and ____s—.

After lunch, which they had on the terrace, King Lune ____d up his brow and heaved a sigh and said, “Heigh-ho! We have still that sorry creature Rabadash on our hands, my friends, and must needs resolve what to do with him.

Take ____. Your doom is very near, but you may still avoid it.

But at the very first scrape of the ____s a rocket seemed to go up inside their heads, and the poet sang the great old lay of Fair Olvin and how he fought the Giant Pire and turned him into stone (and that is the origin of Mount Pire—it was a two-headed Giant) and won the Lady Liln for his bride; and when it was over they wished it was going to begin again.

I know you. You are the foul fiend of Narnia. You are the enemy of gods. Learn who I am, horrible ____.

And the wine flowed and tales were told and jokes were cracked, and then silence was made and the King's poet with two ____s stepped out into the middle of the circle.

Your royal Highness needs not to be told,” said King Lune, “that by the law of nations as well as by all reasons, of ____ policy, we have as good right to your head as ever one mortal man had against another.