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Test your basic knowledge |
CSET English Reading Understanding Text
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
reading-and-comprehension
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 short - witty verse or saying; similar to aphorism or maxim
anthropomorphism
epigram
interior monologue
verbal irony
2. An introductory section of a play - speech - or other literary work
Foot
prologue
epitaph
stream of consciousness
3. A break or pause (usually for sense) in the middle of a verse line - marked in prosody by a double vertical line (||)
monometer
end rhyme
jargon
caesura
4. The larger - than - life central character in an epic (a long narrative poem about events of crucial importance to the history of a culture/nation)
epic hero
alliteration
anapestic (anapest)
rhyme
5. A brief statement commemorating a dead person - often inscribed on a gravestone
epitaph
jargon
repetition
flashback
6. Rhyme that occurs within a line of verse
colloquialisms
epilogue
internal rhyme
Foot
7. The central understanding about life as expressed in a work of literature; may be stated or expressed directly; usually implied or revealed gradually through events - dialogue - and outcome
theme
mood
rhythm
imagery
8. The point of view/perspective of a story when it is told by someone who stands outside the story
soliloquy
Third person
hyperbole
regionalism
9. Repetition of initial consonant sounds in words; used as musical device
alliteration
trimeter
internal rhyme
conflict
10. A metrical foot; /_ _ (stressed - unstressed - unstressed)
enjambment
dactylic (dactyl)
onomatopoeia
denouement
11. The sequence of events in a short story - novel - or drama
rhyme
first person
plot
hubris
12. A literary technique in which the author uses clues to prepare readers for events that will occur later
spondaic (spondee)
Transcendentalism
foreshadowing
protagonist
13. Five feet per line of poetry
narrative
pentameter
magic realism
octameter
14. The repetition of the same or similar vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end with different consonant sounds
genre
magic realism
assonance
narrative
15. One foot per line of poetry
monometer
heptameter (or septameter)
hero
metaphor
16. Persuasive writing
anapestic (anapest)
malapropism
moral
rhetoric
17. Poetry in which characters are revealed through dialogue - monologue - and description
couplet
metonymy
dramatic poetry
assonance
18. A narrator who gives a faulty or distorted account of the events in a story; a child as a narrator might misinterpret someone's actions
anthropomorphism
epigraph
assonance
unreliable narrator
19. A philosophy that values human freedom and personal responsibility. Writers include: Jean - Paul Sartre - Kierkegaard - Camus - Nietzsche - Franz Kafka - and Simon de Beauvoir
dramatic poetry
allegory
existentialism
limited omniscient
20. An author's choice of words - based on their effectiveness for the author's purpose
epigraph
diction
rhetorical question
archaic
21. A figure of speech in which a comparison in implied but not stated (ex: The snow was a white blanket)
flash - forward
symbol
Transcendentalism
metaphor
22. Rhyming that occurs within a single line
interior monologue
blank verse
internal rhyme
assonance
23. Six feet per line of poetry
hexameter
anecdote
regionalism
denouement
24. The literal - or dictionary - meaning of a word
denotation
irony
interior monologue
setting
25. A person - place - thing - or event used to represent something else (ex: scarlet 'A' representing the sin of adultery)
symbol
onomatopoeia
theme
analogy
26. The methods - direct and indirect - used by a writer to reveal a character's personality
hexameter
characterization
blank verse
allegory
27. The literary representation of a character's free - flowing thought processes - memories - and emotions; often does not use conventional sentence structure or rules of grammar
internal rhyme
stream of consciousness
simile
synecdoche
28. Poetry or lines of dramatic verse written in iambic pentameter
blank verse
Transcendentalism
narrator
refrain
29. The perspective from which a story is told
atmosphere
anecdote
regionalism
point of view
30. A literary style in which the writer combines realistic characters - events - situations - and dialogue with elements that are magical - supernatural - or fantastic
narrative
magic realism
ballad
dramatic irony
31. A significant word - phrase - idea - description - or other element repeated throughout a literary work and related to the theme
motif
atmosphere
jargon
Third person
32. A person portrayed in a literary work
character
internal rhyme
Foot
protagonist
33. A metrical foot; // (stressed - stressed)
setting
rhetorical question
dialogue
spondaic (spondee)
34. Type of diction; language widely considered crude - disgusting - and offensive
ballad
suspense
aphorism
vulgarity
35. Type of diction; old fashioned words no longer in common use
simile
ballad
allegory
archaic
36. A form of dramatic poetry in which a speaker addresses a silent listener
epigram
dramatic monologue
characterization
tetrameter
37. Eight feet per line of poetry
octameter
omniscient
slant rhyme
alliteration
38. The repetition of the same stressed vowel sounds and any succeeding sounds in two or more words
setting
hyperbole
rhyme
soliloquy
39. A sudden intuitive recognition of the essence or meaning of something
dialogue
alliteration
epiphany
epigraph
40. A long speech by a character in a literary work
monologue
metaphor
simile
character
41. A word or phrase that is so overused that it has lost its expressive power
cadence
plot
cliche
allusion
42. A question to which no answer is expected or the answer is obvious
metonymy
rhetorical question
unreliable narrator
flashback
43. The chief character in a literary work - usually one with admirable qualities
malapropism
archaic
suspense
hero
44. A literary device in which the author interrupts the chronological order of a narrative to show something that happened in the past
imagery
verbal irony
flashback
monologue
45. The author's attitude toward his/her subject matter or audience; expressed through diction - punctuation - syntax - and figures of speech; (ex: humorous - serious - formal - distant - friendly)
meter
end rhyme
tone
Third person
46. A metrical foot; _ _/ (unstressed - unstressed - stressed)
anapestic (anapest)
dramatic monologue
meter
slang
47. The use of a word or phrase to mean the exact opposite of its literal or expected meaning.
hyperbole
refrain
denotation
irony
48. A type of narrative nonfiction recounting a period in the writer's life
memoir
archetype
setting
first person
49. A narrative in which situations and characters are invented by the author
profanity
archetype
fiction
apostrophe
50. A category or type of literature - defined by its style - form - and content (ex: poetry - drama - fiction - and nonfiction)
regionalism
rhyme scheme
motif
genre