SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP College Composition
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
writing-skills
,
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. 'ed' form of a verb - 'Bettina played with the children'
hypothetic example
participle
over generalization
allegory
2. Vague - not easily defined
abstract
Auxiliary verb
indicative
consonance
3. Opposing point of view
allegory
rebuttal
candor
fiction
4. A kind or more gentle word to dilute the meaning in order to evade responsibility for a more disturbing word - i.e. 'passed on' instead of 'died'
substantive
euphemism
anecdote
false dilemma
5. Quiet reflection upon a topic
protagonist
colon
musing
explicit
6. Expressly stated
Shakespearean rhyme
semicolon
explicit
damn with faint praise
7. Main idea of an essay - what the writer hope to prove is true
explicit
cause-effect organization
thesis
dilemma
8. Further information about the subject (predicate must contain the verb)
predicate
gerund
assertion
soapstone
9. Essay that presents information about a problem followed by a description of one or more solutions
fact
understatement
problem-solution organization
idiom
10. An indirect attack or insinuation
innuendo
assonance
second person
bias
11. Abbaabba cdecde or abbaabba cdcdcd
participle
colon
dilemma
Italian rhyme
12. Refers to ascribing emotion and agency to inanimate objects
apostrophe
pathetic fallacy
diatribe
dilemma
13. (1) a short poetic nickname; (2) a term used to describe the name or title of a person -ie 'The Great Emancipator' for Abraham Lincoln; (3) an abusive slur
Alexandrine
epithet
oxymoron
assonance
14. A line of iambic hexameter; the final line of a Spenserian stanza is alexandrine
Alexandrine
voice
extended metaphor
feminine rhyme
15. A word that introduces a subordinate clause - i.e. 'Since you're awake - I'll turn on the radio'
subordinate conjunction
symbol
tongue-in-cheek
fiction
16. An error of reasoning based on faulty use of evidence
tone
metaphor
bias
fallacy
17. Reasoning by which a general statement is reached on the basis of particular examples
bias
exemplar
induction
caesura
18. To write around a subject - evasively - say nothing
Italian rhyme
Auxiliary verb
diction
circumlocution
19. Rarely used - the writer uses the pronoun 'you' making the reader an active participant in the work
second person
hyperbole
simple sentence
antithesis balanced
20. A negative statement
infinitive
negation
Italian rhyme
participle
21. An exception to a proposed general rule
counterexample
problem-solution organization
voice
epigram
22. A variety of literary devices i.e. - anaphora - repeating
discretion
candor
framing
repetition
23. A rhyme ending on the final stressed syllable - i.e. know and snow
masculine rhyme
cadence
litotes
explicit
24. An exaggeration or overstatement
episodic
over generalization
hyperbole
double entendre
25. A phrase that refers to a person or object by single important feature of that person or object
second person
synecdoche
problem-solution organization
understatement
26. A comparison of two unlike things in order to show or more clearly or in a new way
pathos
metaphor
simple sentence
Spenserian rhyme
27. A figure of speech in which two contradictory elements are combined for effect - i.e. 'random order'
synaesthesia
imagery
oxymoron
abstraction
28. Example based on supposition or uncertainty
paradox
hypothetic example
synaesthesia
rhetorical question
29. Language that is not meant to be taken literally - such as metaphor - simile - personification - metonymy
empirical
figurative language
over generalization
abstract
30. A figure of speech in which sharply contrasting ideas are juxtaposed in a balanced or parallel phrase or grammatical structure - i.e. 'to err is human; to forgive - divine'
antithesis balanced
third person omniscient
pathos
Alexandrine
31. Abab bcbc cdcd ee
colon
complement
gerund
Spenserian rhyme
32. A speaker directly addresses something or someone not living - that cannot answer back
simple sentence
apostrophe
syntax
synaesthesia
33. Acronym for basic elements of nonfictional text - speaker - occasion - audience - purpose - subject - tone
imagery
double entendre
innuendo
soapstone
34. Vowel rhyme
protagonist
assonance
metaphor
rebuttal
35. Essay that presents information in order of occurrence - or sequence of events
candor
chronological organization
generality organization
concrete
36. A thing - idea - or person that stands for something else
circular reasoning
fact
syllogism
symbol
37. An event or experience that causes disappointment because it is less exciting than what was expected
pathos
anticlimax
imperative
bias
38. Innocence in perception - lack of worldly knowledge
explicit
naivete
footnote
chronological organization
39. Verb used to express conditional or counterfactual statements - i.e. 'If I were rich'
metaphor
subjunctive
oxymoron
rebuttal
40. Saying less than is warranted by the situation in order to emphasize reality
syllogism
understatement
soapstone
protagonist
41. Understatement created through double negative
anthropomorphism
propaganda
litotes
tongue-in-cheek
42. Short narrative of an amusing - unusual - revealing or interesting event
musing
maxim
anecdote
allegory
43. The official 'headquarters' of a state or nation - its actual location or area
truism
capital
abstraction
double entendre
44. The opposite of an idea used to emphasize a point
maxim
antithesis
bias
fallacy
45. The claim or point that the writer is making
empirical
assertion
fact
voice
46. Refers to the way the writer lets readers know what will be discussed - a framing statement gives the reader some sense of what to expect
repetition
framing
imagery
negation
47. The metaphor forms the basis for the entire work - extends throughout the work or passage
pathetic fallacy
Italian rhyme
extended metaphor
concrete
48. Abab cdcd efef gg
Shakespearean rhyme
framing
emphatic organization
negation
49. Combines a compound sentence with a complex sentence
footnote
predicate
colloquial
compound complex sentence
50. The ordinary - everyday speech of a region
cause and effect
analogy
vernacular
hyperbole