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Test your basic knowledge |
CSET English Composition And Rhetoric
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
english
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. Names male persons or animals e.g. father - uncle - brother - stag
Interrogative Pronouns
Style
Sarcasm
Masculine Nouns
2. The writer explains the relationships between concepts or terms
Doublespeak
Compound Pronouns
Antecedent
Classification
3. Anglo - Saxon - which is a dialect of West Germanic. Half of the words in English come from French. Scientific words in English often have Greek or Latin roots.
Period
English origins
Future Perfect Tense
To cite a book in APA format
4. Language that is intended to be evasive or to conceal the truth
Personal Pronouns
Doublespeak
Writing Activities
Student - created sources
5. Specialized language of a particular group or culture
Writing Activities
Jargon
Types of Source Material for Writing
Reciprocal Pronouns
6. Refer to specific people - places - or things this - that - these - those e.g. Which skates are ligher - THESE or THOSE?
Etymology
Demonstrative Pronouns
Gerund
Future Perfect Tense
7. McMurtry - Larry. Buffalo Girls. New York: Simon and Schuster - 1960.
How to site for a book in MLA format
Period
Indefinite Nouns
Other sources
8. Use of positive messages to recongnize or influence others
Praise
Past Perfect Tense
Linking or Connecting Verbs
Complex Sentence
9. At least one dependent clause and two or more independent clauses Ex: When Sara turned seven (dependent c) - her mother planned a birthday party for her (independent c) - and Sara invited everyone in her class (independent c).
Feminine Nouns
Compound/ Complex Sentence
Morphology
Ambiguity
10. Groups of related words that operate as a single part of speech - such as a verb - verbal - prepositional - appositive - or absolute
Possessive Case Pronoun
Phrases
Ineffective Sentences
Cause and Effect
11. Show possession or ownership. - apostrophes NOT used - my - his - her
Intransitive Verbs
Future Tense
Sematics
Possessive Case Pronoun
12. A sentence consisting of one independent clause and no dependent clause.
Dash
MLA
Praise
Simple Sentence
13. A way of expressing something (in language or art or music etc.) that is characteristic of a particular person or group of people or period
Present Tense
Style
Compound subject - compound predicate
Past Perfect Tense
14. The study of the structure of sentences
Sematics
Rhetoric organizational patterns
Syntax
Doublespeak
15. Use around information that does not fit into the flow of the sentence - but that you want to include
Parentheses
Possessive Case Noun
Ineffective Sentences
Classification
16. A short - staccato sentence that provides meaningful emphasis Ex: So be it.
Effective Sentence
Etymology
Infinitive Verb
Future Perfect Tense
17. The perspective from which the writer tells the story (1st - 2nd - 3rd person; omniscient - limited omniscient)
Period
Past Perfect Tense
point of view
Objective Case Noun
18. Pronouns used to ask questions. What - which - who - whom - whose e.g. WHAT is going on? WHO turned off the lights?
Interrogative Pronouns
Effective Sentence
Present Tense
Sematics
19. Marks
Stages of the Writing Process (in order)
Phonology
Brackets
Participle Verb
20. These help the main word verb describe action that happened in the past - is happening in the present - or will happen in the future; have - had - has - could - will have - will - shall - am - is
Phonetics
Intensive Pronouns
Masculine Nouns
Auxiliary or Helping Verbs
21. When the action begins in the past but concludes in the present e.g. Tom 'has ordered' the same thing for lunch every day this month.
Comparison
Types of Source Material for Writing
Present Perfect Tense
Personal Pronouns
22. Each other - one another
Phrasal Pronouns
Stages of the Writing Process (in order)
Conditional Sentence
Types of Source Material for Writing
23. A student's personal dictionary of words to know or spell - note cards - graphic organizers - oral histories - and journals
Phrasal Pronouns
Student - created sources
Interrogative Pronouns
Clauses
24. The writer describes a person - place - or thing - organizing the description in a logical manner
Dash
Intensive Pronouns
location
How to site for a book in MLA format
25. The order in which events happen in time.
Rhetoric organizational patterns
Possessive Case Pronoun
Chronological order
Masculine Nouns
26. The study of langauge as it relates to society - including race - class - gender and age
Sarcasm
Counterpoint
Sociolinguistics
Cause and Effect
27. Can be a direct object - an indirect object - or an object of the preposition - it - them etc.
Reciprocal Pronouns
Intransitive Verbs
Objective Case Pronoun
MLA
28. Referrence works - Internet - Student - created sources and Other sources
Syntax
Types of Source Material for Writing
Cause and Effect
Conditional Sentence
29. Analogy - cause and effects - compare and contrast and illustration
Feminine Nouns
Compound subject - compound predicate
Types of Source Material for Writing
Rhetoric organizational patterns
30. Shows possession or ownership
Declarative Sentence
Nominative Case Noun
Comma
Possessive Case Noun
31. Pronouns combined with self or selves myself - ourselves - yourself yourselves - himself - herself - itself - oneself themselves
Declarative Sentence
Sarcasm
Counterpoint
Compound Pronouns
32. The multiple meanings - either intentional or unintentional - of a word - phrase - sentence - or passage
Compound/ Complex Sentence
Doublespeak
Ambiguity
point of view
33. Can be the subject of a clause or the predicate noun when it follows a linking verb e.g. 'be'
Nominative Case Noun
Dash
Adjective
Climax
34. Names a group of people - animals or objects. Example: army - family - club - group - people - children
Reflective Pronouns
location
Collective Nouns
Neutral Nouns
35. The quality of something (an act or a piece of writing) that reveals the attitudes and presuppositions of the author
location
Nominative Case Pronoun
Tone
Apostrophe
36. Name only one person - place - thing - or idea e.g. citzen - city - house - earthquake
Compound/ Complex Sentence
Counterpoint
Singular Nouns
Demonstrative Pronouns
37. Modfies verbs - adjectives - other adverbs - or entire clauses - they often answer of the following questions: How - When - Where - Why - To what extent?
Adverbs
Abstract Nouns
Cause and Effect
Imperative Sentence
38. Dictionaries - encyclopedias - writers' reference handbooks - books of lists - almanacs - thesauruses - books of quotations - and so on
Reciprocal Pronouns
Reference works
Brackets
APA?
39. Connect the subject and the subject complement (an adjective - noun - or noun equivalent) Example: It 'was' rainy. Erin 'is' happy.
How to site for a book in MLA format
Ineffective Sentences
Counterpoint
Linking or Connecting Verbs
40. An interchange of the action started by the verb. There are only two in English: EACH OTHER for an involving two and ONE ANOTHER for an interaction involving three or more. e.g. After the debate - the two opponents shook hands with EACH OTHER.
Future Tense
Exclamation Point
Reciprocal Pronouns
Brackets
41. A punctuation mark (-) used between parts of a compound word or between the syllables of a word when the word is divided at the end of a line of text
Student - created sources
Hyphen
Linking or Connecting Verbs
Simple Sentence
42. Refer back to subject nouns and pronouns - self myself - yourself - himself - herself - itself - etc. e.g. Sam knew she could do it HERSELF.
Reflective Pronouns
Objective Case Pronoun
Sociolinguistics
Doublespeak
43. A punctuation mark (?) placed at the end of a sentence to indicate a question
Other sources
Question Mark
MLA
Rhetoric organizational patterns
44. Names female persons or animals e.g. mother - aunt - sister - doe
Sematics
Feminine Nouns
Clauses
Nominative Case Noun
45. The role of context in the interpretation of meaning
MLA
Adjective
Ineffective Sentences
Pragmatics
46. A polite term used to avoid directly naming something considered offensive or unpleasant Ex. Toilet - Ladies' Room
Euphemism
Adjective
Doublespeak
Abstract Nouns
47. Names we have for ideas - emotions - qualities - processes - occasions and times. Invisible and tangible. e.g. 'joy' - 'gentleness' - 'wedding' - memory - peace -
Compound subject - single predicate
English origins
Past Perfect Tense
Abstract Nouns
48. A sentence with one independent clause and at least one dependent clause. Ex: If you want to stay healthy(dependent c.) - you must choose your food carefully(independent c.)
Complex Sentence
Phonology
Phonetics
Phrasal Pronouns
49. Film - art - media and so on
Parentheses
Ineffective Sentences
Jargon
Other sources
50. McMurtry - Larry (1960). <I> Buffalo Girls </I>. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Pragmatics
Compound subject - compound predicate
point of view
To cite a book in APA format