Explore Disney songs through quizzes that focus on lyrics, characters, and moments from the films. You’ll practice recognizing titles, matching songs to scenes, and recalling who sings what across classic and modern Disney soundtracks.

Can you name the Disney song from just a single quoted lyric or line? This mixed-difficulty quiz spans classics and modern favorites, so you’ll need both sharp recall and a good ear for iconic phrasing. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then see how many you can identify in a row.

Think you know Disney choruses by heart? In this quiz, you’ll finish iconic chorus lyrics from classic and modern Disney songs. Pick the missing line from four options and see how many you can nail without a timer.

Can you recognize a Disney song from just its very first line? In this quiz, you’ll match iconic openings to the correct song title across classics, modern hits, and everything in between. It’s a fun way to test your memory and discover which intros you truly know by heart.
There are 3 quizzes with 316 questions total.
No. Each question is untimed, so you can answer at your own pace.
Every question uses 4 multiple-choice options.
They focus on song titles, lyrics, who sings them, and the scenes or movies they come from.
Yes. Across the 3 quizzes, you’ll find a mix of shorter and longer sets with easier and more challenging questions.
These Disney Songs quizzes help you connect song titles, lyrics, and performers to the right movie moments. You’ll also review character-song pairings and key story beats that happen during musical numbers.
Each question has 4 multiple-choice options and there’s no timer, so you can focus on accuracy over speed. Quiz length and difficulty vary across the 3 quizzes, with a mix of quicker checks and longer, more detailed question sets.
Disney songs are often written to move the plot forward, introduce characters, or signal a turning point, which is why certain lines and melodies are so memorable. From Broadway-style “I want” songs to villain themes and ensemble finales, the music is designed to be story-first.