No there won't. But here's some vocab I enjoy. Pulled these from space.com ...
Gibbous: Used to describe a planet or moon that is more than 50% illuminated.
Asterism: A noteworthy or striking pattern of stars within a larger constellation.
Degrees (measuring the sky): The sky is 360 degrees all the way around, which means roughly 180 degrees from horizon to horizon. It's easy to measure distances between objects: Your fist on an outstretched arm covers about 10 degrees of sky, while a finger covers about one degree.
Visual Magnitude: This is the astronomer's scale for measuring the brightness of objects in the sky. The dimmest object visible in the night sky under perfectly dark conditions is about magnitude 6.5. Brighter stars are magnitude 2 or 1. The brightest objects get negative numbers. Venus can be as bright as magnitude minus 4.9. The full moon is minus 12.7 and the sun is minus 26.8.
Terminator: The boundary on the moon between sunlight and shadow.
Zenith: The point in the sky directly overhead.
Plus a little brush-up on the phases / faces of the moon...
There is something satisfying about the patterns happening with the light and the dance of the moon. Am I a creature the finds comfort in patterns? Do we as a whole find patterns comforting? Is this dance constantly breaking pattern and form based on gravities or situation?
What! No test! I don't know if I'd do very well, but I'd definitely enjoy reading the questions and answers. So then actually I'd do very well :-) because maybe that's my definition of success for a test like this.