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Test your basic knowledge |
AP Literary Terms
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
english
,
ap
,
literature
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The suggested or implied meaning of a word or phrase
connotation
muse
satire
wit
2. The act of determining the meter of a poetic line.
humanism
paraphrase
litotes
scan
3. A style of writing in which the author tries to reproduce the random flow of thoughts in the human mind
expose
ballad
stream of consciousness
farce
4. A term often used as a synonym for realism - also a view of experience that is generally characterized as bleak and pessimistic.
sonnet
bombast
persona
naturalism
5. A witty or ingenious thought; a diverting or highly fanciful idea - often stated in figurative language
naturalism
bibliography
metaphor
conceit
6. Three periods (. . .) indicating the omission of words in a thought or quotation
ellipsis
subplot
mock epic
idyll
7. A story in which the narrative or characters carry an underlying symbolic - metaphorical - or possibly an ethical meaning
syntax
allegory
rhyme scheme
protagonist
8. A mocking - satirical assault on a person or situation
heroic couplet
lampoon
denotation
ode
9. The interpretation or analysis of a text.
explication
Bildungsroman
setting
eponymous
10. The action in a play or story that occurs after the climax and that leads to the conclusion and often to the resolution of the conflict
falling action
paradox
lyric poetry
exegesis
11. The organization of language into meaningful structure; every sentence has a particular pattern of words
pathos
kenning
mock epic
syntax
12. A unit of stressed and unstressed syllables used to determine the meter of a poetic line.
paraphrase
climax
antagonist
foot
13. The main idea or meaning - often an abstract idea upon which a work of literature is built
theme
extended metaphor
muse
villanelle
14. A figure of speech in which a part signifies the whole ('fifty masts' for fifty ships) or the whole signifies the part ('days' for life - as in 'He lived his days in Canada'). Also when the name of the material stands for the thing itself ('pigskin'
adage
epic
indirect quotation
synecdoche
15. The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables found in poetry
meter
Apollonian
roman a clef
humanism
16. As distinguished from Apollonian - the word refers to sensual - pleasure-seeking impulses
verbal irony
Dionysian
in medias res
euphemism
17. Overstatement; gross exaggeration for rhetorical effect
subtext
hyperbole
plot
mock epic
18. A poet; in olden times - a performer who told heroic stories to musical accompaniment
meter
bard
allusion
novella
19. The pattern of rhymes within a given poem
epic
rhyme scheme
belle-lettres
mode
20. A subordinate or minor collection of events in a novel or play - usually connected to the main plot
Dionysian
plot
climax
subplot
21. The work of poets - particularly those of the seventeenth century - that uses elaborate conceits - is highly intellectual - and expresses the complexities of love and life
classic
metaphysical poetry
epic
picaresque novel
22. The resolution that occurs at the end of a play or work of fiction
style
diction
invective
denouement
23. A character whose name appears in the title of the novel or play; also known as the eponymous character
title character
euphony
satire
canon
24. A pause somewhere in the middle of a verse - often (but not always) marked by punctuation
ode
sentiment
wit
caesura
25. The repetition of two or more vowel sounds in a group of words or lines in poetry and prose
non sequitur
assonance
sentimental
denotation
26. A sentence that follows the customary word order of English sentences - i.e. subject-verb-object. The main idea of the sentence is presented first and is then followed by one or more subordinate clauses
loose sentence
ambiguity
lampoon
belle-lettres
27. The depiction of people - things - and events as they really are without idealization or exaggeration for effect.
end-stopped
litotes
free verse
realism
28. The excessive pride that often leads tragic heroes to their death
plot
trope
hubris
denotation
29. A saying or proverb expressing common wisdom or truth
maxim
harangue
bard
coming-of-age story
30. Also called figure of speech. In contrast to literal language - it implies meanings. Includes metaphors - similes - and personification - among others.
burlesque
figurative language
sarcasm
maxim
31. A term that describes characters' excessive emotional response to experience; also nauseatingly nostalgic and mawkish
empathy
sentiment
sentimental
fantasy
32. A French verse form calculated to appear simple and spontaneous but consisting of nineteen lines and a prescribed pattern of rhymes
free verse
epithet
villanelle
elegy
33. A literary form in which events are exaggerated in order to create an extreme emotional response
bard
melodrama
ottava rima
blank verse
34. A work of literature meant to ridicule a subject; a grotesque imitation
burlesque
irony
fable
picaresque novel
35. The language spoken in England roughly between 1150 and 1500 A.D.
bibliography
archetype
pathos
Middle English
36. A statement or idea that fails to follow logically from the one before
montage
conceit
in medias res
non sequitur
37. French term for the world of books - criticism - and literature in general
belle-lettres
pun
pentameter
exegesis
38. One of the ancient Greek goddesses presiding over the arts. The imaginary source of inspiration for an artist or writer
muse
maxim
epithet
conceit
39. Pleasing - harmonious sounds
epic
ellipsis
euphony
ambiguity
40. A device employed in Anglo-Saxon poetry in which the name of a thing is replaced by one of its functions or qualities - as in 'ring-giver' for king and 'whale-road' for ocean
epithet
kenning
idyll
realism
41. Inflated - pretentious language used for trivial subjects
litotes
romance
omniscient narrator
bombast
42. A narrative told by a character involved in the story - using first-person pronouns such as I and we.
first-person narrative
irony
stanza
annotation
43. A mild or less negative usage for a harsh or blunt term; i.e. 'pass away' instead of 'die'
oxymoron
deus ex machina
euphemism
kenning
44. The general form - pattern - and manner of expression of a work of literature
mode
style
catharsis
scan
45. A work of fiction of roughly 20 -000 to 50 -000 words--longer than a short story - but shorter than a novel
ode
quatrain
verse
novella
46. The use of words whose sounds suggest their meaning
fable
onomatopoeia
rhetorical stance
versification
47. A term for the title character of a work of literature
eponymous
coming-of-age story
villanelle
exposition
48. The role or facade that a character assumes or depicts to a reader - a viewer - or the world at large
Apollonian
consonance
analogy
persona
49. A simple narrative verse that tells a story that is sung or recited
genre
ballad
rhetoric
extended metaphor
50. A circumstance in which the audience or reader knows more about a situation than a character - ex. Oedipus Rex
diction
carpe diem
dramatic irony
mode