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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. Style - Tone - Point of View - Sarcasm - Counterpoint and Praise
Possessive Case Pronoun
Past Tense
Clauses
A partial list of rhetorical features that affect the voice of a piece:
2. Names more than one person - place - thing - or idea e.g. citzens - cities - houses - earthquakes -
Plural Nouns
Sematics
Dash
Common Nouns
3. Angie dances with Jay on Saturday nights.
Collective Nouns
Sematics
Independent clause with two phrases
Climax
4. Verbs that take a direct object - words or word groups that complete the meaning of a verb by naming a reciver of the action Ex. Daniel (subject) threw (transitive verb) the ball (direct object).
Reference works
Transitive Verbs
Intransitive Verbs
Future Perfect Tense
5. E.g. floor - desk - computer
Sociolinguistics
Pragmatics
Auxiliary or Helping Verbs
Neutral Nouns
6. Prewriting (also called planning or rehearsal) - shapping - drafting - revising - editing - publishing and evaluating
Present Perfect Tense
Stages of the Writing Process (in order)
Brackets
Compound/ Complex Sentence
7. Name only one person - place - thing - or idea e.g. citzen - city - house - earthquake
Singular Nouns
Classification
Student - created sources
Jargon
8. The multiple meanings - either intentional or unintentional - of a word - phrase - sentence - or passage
Ambiguity
Compound Sentence
Participle Verb
Transitive Verbs
9. McMurtry - Larry (1960). <I> Buffalo Girls </I>. New York: Simon and Schuster.
To cite a book in APA format
Objective Case Noun
Present Perfect Tense
Question Mark
10. The writer shows how events and their results are related
Common Nouns
Intransitive Verbs
Classification
Cause and Effect
11. A sentence that communicates strong feeling or ideas. Example: You scared me!
To cite a book in APA format
Participle Verb
Exclamatory Sentence
Apostrophe
12. A punctuation mark (?) placed at the end of a sentence to indicate a question
Question Mark
Abstract Nouns
Psycholinguistics
Future Tense
13. A sentence that expresses wishes or conditions contrary to fact. Example: If you build it - they will come.
Ambiguity
Abstract Nouns
Conditional Sentence
Collective Nouns
14. A student's personal dictionary of words to know or spell - note cards - graphic organizers - oral histories - and journals
Single Subject - Single Predicate
Intensive Pronouns
Student - created sources
Past Perfect Tense
15. American Psycological Association
Exclamatory Sentence
APA?
English origins
Objective Case Noun
16. A sentence with two or more coordinate independent clauses - often joined by one or more conjunctions Ex: Perry wants to stay in shape - so he rides his bicycle for exercise.
Reciprocal Pronouns
Praise
Compound Sentence
Abstract Nouns
17. The use of contrasting ideas to communicate a message
Indefinite Nouns
Possessive Case Pronoun
Counterpoint
Comma
18. The writer states the details first and places the topic sentence at the end.
Plural Nouns
Illustration
Climax
Objective Case Noun
19. A verb tense that expresses actions or states in the future Example: Tomorrow - Jan 'will bring' her lunch from home.
Future Tense
Question Mark
Sematics
Compound Sentence
20. Groups of related words that operate as a single part of speech - such as a verb - verbal - prepositional - appositive - or absolute
Phonology
Phrases
Illustration
Independent clause with two phrases
21. A punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations
Ethnolinguistics
Period
Parentheses
Imperative Sentence
22. 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
Hyphen
Comma
Compound/ Complex Sentence
Nominative Case Noun
23. The study of language as it relates to the psychological and neurobiological factors that enable humans to learn language
Psycholinguistics
Parentheses
Verbs
Antecedent
24. A verb tense that expresses actions or states in the past Example: Yesterday - the cafeteria 'offered' frozen yogurt for dessert.
Transitive Verbs
Past Tense
point of view
Cause and Effect
25. The role of context in the interpretation of meaning
Common Nouns
Pragmatics
Infinitive Verb
Present Perfect Tense
26. 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.
Brackets
English origins
Student - created sources
Parentheses
27. Film - art - media and so on
Morphology
Sociolinguistics
Linking or Connecting Verbs
Other sources
28. The analysis of how sounds funtion in a langauge or dialect
Rhetoric organizational patterns
Interrogative Sentence
Phonology
Apostrophe
29. The quality of something (an act or a piece of writing) that reveals the attitudes and presuppositions of the author
Historical and political influences on language acquistioin
Feminine Nouns
Indefinite Nouns
Tone
30. 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
Style
Types of Source Material for Writing
Ambiguity
Present Perfect Tense
31. Dictionaries - encyclopedias - writers' reference handbooks - books of lists - almanacs - thesauruses - books of quotations - and so on
Gerund
Declarative Sentence
Reference works
Past Perfect Tense
32. The word - phrase - or clause to which a pronoun refers. Each pronoun must agree with its antecedent in person and number. e.g. The BOYS are going to the game this weekend. THEY need to buy tickets.
Antecedent
Transitive Verbs
Adverbs
Demonstrative Pronouns
33. Angela and Jay dance.
Compound subject - single predicate
Collective Nouns
Future Perfect Tense
Complex Sentence
34. Sentence that makes a statement and tells about a person - place - thing or idea Example: The bird drank from the water fountain.
APA?
Compound subject - single predicate
Declarative Sentence
Stages of the Writing Process (in order)
35. 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.
Participle Verb
Adverbs
Simple Sentence
Present Perfect Tense
36. Pronouns combined with self or selves myself - ourselves - yourself yourselves - himself - herself - itself - oneself themselves
Compound Pronouns
Antecedent
Infinitive Verb
Phonetics
37. Use to separate the elements in a series (three or more things) - to connect two independent clauses - and to set off introductory elements.
Reference works
Syntax
Singular Nouns
Comma
38. The study of meaning in a language
Present Tense
Sematics
Phonetics
Indefinite Nouns
39. A sentence consisting of one independent clause and no dependent clause.
Declarative Sentence
Climax
Simple Sentence
Chronological order
40. Study of the structure of words
Morphology
Indefinite Pronouns
How to site for a book in MLA format
Interrogative Pronouns
41. Every language as a dialect of an older communication form. Example: English two main dialects - British English and American English and they are close political allies
Declarative Sentence
Reciprocal Pronouns
Historical and political influences on language acquistioin
Linking or Connecting Verbs
42. Use of positive messages to recongnize or influence others
Future Tense
Praise
Comma
MLA
43. Show possession or ownership my - mine - your(s) - his - her(s) - its - our(s) - their(s) - whose e.g. If this book isn't HERS - then it must be MINE.
Other sources
Ambiguity
Possessive Pronouns
Dash
44. Refer to specific people - places - or things this - that - these - those e.g. Which skates are ligher - THESE or THOSE?
Rhetoric organizational patterns
Feminine Nouns
Demonstrative Pronouns
Exclamation Point
45. A person - place - or thing that is not specific Example: woman - lion - toy - house
Common Nouns
Indefinite Nouns
Concrete Nouns
Gerund
46. Joins a dependent clause to an independent clause (who - whom - whose - which - that and all of the W's + ever) e.g. The person THAT gave you the book is the boy WHO likes me.
A partial list of rhetorical features that affect the voice of a piece:
Reflective Pronouns
How to site for a book in MLA format
Relative Pronouns
47. Pronouns used to ask questions. What - which - who - whom - whose e.g. WHAT is going on? WHO turned off the lights?
Phrases
Objective Case Noun
Internet
Interrogative Pronouns
48. Specialized language of a particular group or culture
Auxiliary or Helping Verbs
Pragmatics
How to site for a book in MLA format
Jargon
49. The perspective from which the writer tells the story (1st - 2nd - 3rd person; omniscient - limited omniscient)
point of view
Participle Verb
Collective Nouns
Reference works
50. The writer explains the relationships between concepts or terms
Exclamatory Sentence
Classification
Intensive Pronouns
Antecedent