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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. A narrative told by a character involved in the story - using first-person pronouns such as I and we.
sonnet
rhyme
loose sentence
first-person narrative
2. In poetry - the use of successive lines with no punctuation or pause between them
metaphor
invective
enjambment
bard
3. An extended narrative about improbable events and extraordinary people in exotic places
maxim
romance
onomatopoeia
elegy
4. An eight-line rhyming stanza of a poem
epic
elliptical construction
ottava rima
loose sentence
5. An abstract or ideal conception of a type; a perfectly typical example; an original model or form
rhyme scheme
realism
archetype
pastoral
6. The use of words whose sounds suggest their meaning
onomatopoeia
empathy
frame
foreshadowing
7. French term for the world of books - criticism - and literature in general
annotation
pentameter
flashback
belle-lettres
8. A story containing unreal - imaginary features
periodic sentence
fantasy
voice
analogy
9. A feeling of association or identification with an object or person
trope
empathy
rhyme scheme
pun
10. A person - scene - event - or other element in literature that fails to correspond with the time or era in which the work is set
anachronism
omniscient narrator
humanism
simile
11. The pattern of rhymes within a given poem
trope
rhyme scheme
ottava rima
plot
12. A saying or proverb expressing common wisdom or truth
flashback
verbal irony
bombast
maxim
13. A narrator with unlimited awareness - understanding - and insight of characters - setting - background - and all other elements of the story
montage
ambiguity
omniscient narrator
pastoral
14. The main idea or meaning - often an abstract idea upon which a work of literature is built
plot
melodrama
sentiment
theme
15. In literature - the use of an artificial device or gimmick to solve a problem
deus ex machina
bibliography
sonnet
epic
16. A term that describes characters' excessive emotional response to experience; also nauseatingly nostalgic and mawkish
in medias res
light verse
sentimental
rhetorical stance
17. 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'
lampoon
catharsis
synecdoche
couplet
18. A comparison that points out similarities between two dissimilar things
analogy
enjambment
rhythm
apostrophe
19. A work of fiction of roughly 20 -000 to 50 -000 words--longer than a short story - but shorter than a novel
pastoral
bard
novella
novel of manners
20. A figure of speech in which objects and animals are given human characteristics
pathetic fallacy
personification
melodrama
carpe diem
21. The main character in a work of literature
protagonist
empathy
point of view
sarcasm
22. A figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated. Ex: 'The White House says...'
pulp fiction
apostrophe
mode
metonymy
23. The interpretation or analysis of a text.
epithet
explication
exegesis
oxymoron
24. The high point - or turning point - of a story or play
climax
deus ex machina
Dionysian
Old English
25. The relation in which a narrator or speaker stands to the story or subject matter of a poem.
frame
point of view
lyric poetry
onomatopoeia
26. A humorous play on words - using similar-sounding or identical words to suggest different meanings
pun
novella
pathos
satire
27. A forceful sermon - lecture - or tirade
harangue
humanism
archetype
rhythm
28. A rhetorical opposition or contrast of ideas by means of a grammatical arrangement of words - clauses - or sentences: 'They promised freedom but provided slavery'
frame
meter
antithesis
explication
29. A subordinate or minor collection of events in a novel or play - usually connected to the main plot
ballad
ambiguity
fantasy
subplot
30. A saying or proverb containing a truth based on experience and often couched in metaphorical language
harangue
adage
personification
voice
31. A brief explanation - summary - or evaluation of a text or work of literature
exposition
periodic sentence
expose
annotation
32. 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
metaphysical poetry
periodic sentence
verbal irony
Apollonian
33. The real or assumed personality used by a writer or speaker
voice
light verse
expose
point of view
34. Three periods (. . .) indicating the omission of words in a thought or quotation
ellipsis
euphony
enjambment
personification
35. A term that describes a line of poetry that ends with a natural pause often indicated by a mark of punctuation.
end-stopped
empathy
antithesis
pulp fiction
36. The quickness of intellect and the power and talent for saying brilliant things that suprise and delight by their unexpectedness; the power to comment subtly and pointedly on the foibles of the passing scene
wit
pentameter
caesura
plot
37. Faulty reasoning that inappropriately ascribes human feelings to nature or nonhuman objects
pathetic fallacy
persona
indirect quotation
foot
38. A poet; in olden times - a performer who told heroic stories to musical accompaniment
denouement
sonnet
bard
Middle English
39. A kind of poetry without rhymed lines - rhythm - or fixed metrical feet
mode
loose sentence
rhetoric
free verse
40. A version of a text put into simpler - everyday words
irony
archetype
couplet
paraphrase
41. A brief and often simplistic lesson that a reader may infer from a work of literature
moral
subplot
Bildungsroman
humanism
42. Similar to the truth; the quality of realism in a work that persuades readers that they are getting a vision of life as it is.
bombast
verisimilitude
first-person narrative
indirect quotation
43. The background and events that lead to the presentation of the main idea or purpose of a work of literature
image
exposition
annotation
picaresque novel
44. A unit of stressed and unstressed syllables used to determine the meter of a poetic line.
foot
harangue
metaphor
synecdoche
45. The dictionary definition of a word
archetype
ellipsis
point of view
denotation
46. The repetition of two or more vowel sounds in a group of words or lines in poetry and prose
loose sentence
sarcasm
assonance
ottava rima
47. A synonym for view or feeling; also a refined and tender emotion in literature
sentiment
connotation
picaresque novel
epithet
48. The grammar of meter and rhythm in poetry
prosody
mock epic
fable
melodrama
49. A sentence that departs from the usual word order of English sentences by expressing its main though only at the end. In other words - the particulars in the sentence are presented before the idea they support.
pathetic fallacy
periodic sentence
omniscient narrator
antithesis
50. A verse with five poetic feet per line
extended metaphor
pentameter
eponymous
bathos