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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. A phrase or saying that has two meanings - one being sexual or provocative in nature
double entendre
innuendo
participle
exemplar
2. An interpretation of the facts based on available details
soapstone
voice
inference
concrete
3. One of many prepositions
under
refutation
substantive
indicative
4. Essay that presents information in order of specificity - beginning with a general theme and focuses on a specific topic of interest - often the 5 paragraph essay
generality organization
satire
third person omniscient
problem-solution organization
5. Appearing in episodes - a long string of short individual scenes
tone
episodic
dilemma
colon
6. Expressed of direct address - i.e. 'Sit - Bettina - sit!'
analogy
vocative
ethos
parallel structure
7. Example - I think that your sweater is lovely
anticlimax
implicit
compliment
simple sentence
8. Verb in present tense - 'Bettina plays with children'
consonance
discretion
indicative
synecdoche
9. 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'
euphemism
refutation
paraody
inference
10. The juxtaposition of incongruous or conflicting ideas that reveals a truth or insight
first person
allusion
paradox
wit
11. Quiet reflection upon a topic
musing
pathetic fallacy
explicit
analogy
12. An event or experience that causes disappointment because it is less exciting than what was expected
qualifying a claim
anticlimax
paraody
gerund
13. Rarely used - the writer uses the pronoun 'you' making the reader an active participant in the work
irony
second person
anecdote
pathos
14. Open - honest communication
candor
hypothetic example
parallel structure
epithet
15. A verb used for issuing commands - 'Do it now!'
catalog
imperative
compound sentence
simile
16. Essay that presents information about two or more things - events - or ideas in order to compare them
comparison organization
false dilemma
substantive
refutation
17. Expressly stated
personification
explicit
capital
chronological organization
18. The commentator does not mean what she writes
ironic commentary
imagery
abstract
oxymoron
19. Innocence in perception - lack of worldly knowledge
naivete
apostrophe
bias
ethos
20. The main character who opposes the protagonist - usually the villain
antagonist
synaesthesia
empirical
analogy
21. A concept or idea without a specific example; idealized generalizations
abstraction
imperative
paradox
double entendre
22. Knowledge based on experience or observation - the view that experience - especially of the senses - is the only source of knowledge
empirical
ironic commentary
complement
exemplar
23. Essay that presents information about a problem followed by a description of one or more solutions
colon
fallacy
pathos
problem-solution organization
24. The work is narrated using a name or third person pronoun ie - he - she - etc.
infinitive
figurative language
onomatopoeia
third person
25. A comparison of two unlike things in order to show or more clearly or in a new way
concrete
metonymy
catalog
metaphor
26. Verb used to express conditional or counterfactual statements - i.e. 'If I were rich'
fact
infinitive
subjunctive
counterexample
27. Refers to ascribing emotion and agency to inanimate objects
musing
diction
pathetic fallacy
propaganda
28. A type of poem that takes the form of a lament for the dead sung by a shepherd
parallel structure
cadence
pastoral elegy
synecdoche
29. An error of reasoning based on faulty use of evidence
rebuttal
naivete
fallacy
damn with faint praise
30. Acronym for basic elements of nonfictional text - speaker - occasion - audience - purpose - subject - tone
burlesque
soapstone
tone
idealism
31. A phrase that refers to a person or object by single important feature of that person or object
litotes
synecdoche
fiction
circumlocution
32. Used to introduce a long quotation - list
vocative
emphatic organization
colon
euphemism
33. Consists of a single independent clause
personification
digress
consonance
simple sentence
34. Language chosen by the writer
assonance
diction
innuendo
musing
35. ... - used to indicate omission of words or letters
catalog
since
ellipsis
implicit
36. The perspective from which a story is written
voice
vernacular
fiction
maxim
37. List of details that reinforces a concept
circumlocution
catalog
protagonist
hyperbole
38. Third-person narrator tells another's story using third-person pronouns
third person limited
simple sentence
propaganda
framing
39. Referring to phrases that suggest an interplay of the senses - ie 'hot pink' or 'golden voice'
tongue-in-cheek
vocative
hyperbole
synaesthesia
40. A type of literature that exposes idiocy - corruption - or other human folly - through humor - exaggeration - irony
personification
discretion
paradox
satire
41. A work or poem written to celebrate a wedding
epithalamium
symbol
fact
first person
42. Another way to say the writer used an analogy
repetition
false dilemma
antagonist
analogical comparison
43. 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
framing
infinitive
vocative
paradox
44. Consists or two or more simple sentences joined by a common and coordinating conjunction - or by a semicolon
alliteration
refutation
capitol
compound sentence
45. Vowel rhyme
gerund
assonance
induction
subjunctive
46. A comic tool of satire - ridiculous exaggeration or distortion
burlesque
compliment
verb phrase
negation
47. Words that mean the opposite of their literal meaning - i.e. 'how wonderful that you wrecked your car!'
predicate
irony
diatribe
simple sentence
48. A figure of speech in which two contradictory elements are combined for effect - i.e. 'random order'
simple sentence
pathos
oxymoron
paraody
49. Simplifying a complex problem into an either or dichotomy
false dilemma
masculine rhyme
footnote
diatribe
50. An attack on an opposing view to weaken - invalidate - or make it less credible
refutation
complement
Shakespearean rhyme
gerund