SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
CSET Literature - 2
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
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. Type of folk tale - Abound in every culture - In most cases - the animal characters are clearly anthropomorphic and display human personalities
Euphemism
Analyzing Poetry: What is the dramatic situation?
Animal folk tales
Figurative Language
2. A poem having 14 lines - usually in iambic pentameter - and a formal arrangement of rhymes.
Diction
Sonnet
Setting
Protagonist
3. A figurative use of language that endows nonhumans (ideas - inanimate objects - animals - abstractions) with human characteristics. 'The angry sea crashed against the wall.'
Novel
Personification
Symbol
Figurative Language
4. Think about: The parts/structural divisions of the poem and how they are related to each other - The punctuation - Repetitions (i.e. parallel syntax or the use of a simile in each sentence) - The logic of the poem. Does it ask questions and then answ
Analyzing Poetry: What is the structure of the poem?
Alliteration
Allusion
Theme
5. Be able to see the point of the poem - Define what the poem says and why. i.e. A love poem usually praises the loved one in the hope that the speaker's love will be returned.
Feminine ending
Analyzing Poetry: What is the theme of the poem?
Irony
Setting
6. A device of style or subject matter so often used that it becomes a recognized means of expression.(A lover observing the literary love conventions cannot eat or sleep and grows pale and lean.)
Hyperbole
Dramatic structure/elements of fiction
Convention
Novel
7. The dictionary meaning of a word - as opposed to connotation.
Setting
Denotation
Soliloquy
Attitude
8. Hero/heroine - One of the main characters of a literary work - Usually in conflict with the antagonist (villain)
Diction
Analyzing Poetry: What is the structure of the poem?
Animal folk tales
Protagonist
9. The mode of expression in a language; the characteristic manner of expression of an author. - Elements/techniques include diction - syntax - figurative language - imagery - selection of detail - sound effects - and tone.
Protagonist
Style
Narrative techniques
Structure
10. A figurative use of language in which a comparison is expressed without the use of a comparative term like as - like - or than. Ex: 'The black bat night.'
Analyzing Poetry
Analyzing Poetry: What are the important images and figures of speech?
Metaphor
Myths
11. Type of folk tale - Narratives that often include creation stories and explain tribal beginnings - May incorporate supernatural beings or quasi - historical figures (e.g. King Arthur - Lady Godiva) - Told and retold as if they are based on facts; alw
Animal folk tales
Legends
Thesis
Flashback
12. A fictional narrative in prose of considerable length - Styles include picaresque - epistolary - gothic - romantic - realist - and historical ren have mastered the mechanics of reading - between ages 9 and 12 - they are prepared to sustain the more d
Diction
Analyzing Poetry: What are the important images and figures of speech?
Novel
Analogy
13. Usually concrete objects or images that represent abstract ideas; something that is simultaneously itself and a sign of something else. For example - winter - darkness - and cold are real things - but in literature they are also likely to be used as
Paradox
Thesis
Personification
Symbol
14. An accurate history of a single person.
Short Story
Biography
Allusion
Tragedy
15. Understand the meaning of all the words in the poem - especially words you think you know but which don't seem to fit in the context of the poem. - Understand the grammar of the poem. - Beware of skewed word order (i.e. a direct object before the sub
Paradox
Analogy
Analyzing Poetry: Is the meaning clear?
Imagery
16. An author's account of his or her own life.
Alliteration
Autobiography
Connotation
Personification
17. A reference in a work of literature to something outside the work - especially to a well - known historical or literary event - person - or work. (In Hamlet - when Horatio says - 'ere the mightiest Julius fell -' the allusion is to the death of Juliu
Euphemism
Allusion
Examples of folk tales
Omniscient point of view
18. The interrelated actions of a play or a novel that move to a climax and a final resolution.
Climax
Rhetorical techniques
Parable
Plot
19. The devices used in effective or persuasive language - Most common examples include contrast - repetitions - paradox - understatement - sarcasm - and rhetorical question.
Soliloquy
Biography
novellas
Rhetorical techniques
20. Word choice; any word/detail that is important to the meaning and effect of the writing.
Diction
Analyzing Poetry: What is the tone of the poem?
Analyzing Poetry: What is the structure of the poem?
Exposition
21. Fairy tales - legends of all types - animal folk tales - fables - tall tales - and humorous anecdotes
Oxymoron
Paradox
Denotation
Examples of folk tales
22. What is the dramatic situation? What is the structure of the poem? What is the theme of the poem? Is the meaning clear? What is the tone of the poem? What are the important images and figures of speech?
Structure
Short Story
Analyzing Poetry
Folk tales
23. Normally the point of highest interest in a novel - short story - or play. As a technical term of dramatic composition - the climax is the place where the action reaches a turning point - where the rising action (the complication of the plot) ends -
Ballad
novellas
Style
Climax
24. A play with a serious content and an unhappy ending. (Shakespeare's Hamlet - Miller's Death of a Salesman.)
Analyzing Poetry: What are the important images and figures of speech?
Convention
Tragedy
Strategy/Rhetorical strategy
25. A folk poem that tells a story - uses simple language - and originally was written to be sung.
Analogy
Ballad
Literal Language
Personification
26. A speech in which a character who is alone speaks his or her thoughts aloud (Hamlet's 'To be - or not to be' and 'O! What a rogue and peasant slave am I') - A monologue also has a single speaker - but the monologuist speaks to others who do not inter
Rhetorical question
Satire
Soliloquy
Strategy/Rhetorical strategy
27. A combination of opposites; the union of contradictory terms. (Romeo's line 'feather of lead - bright smoke - cold fire - sick health' contains four examples of the device.)
Oxymoron
Hyperbole
Point of view
Imagery
28. The background to a story; the physical location of a story - play - or novel. - The setting of a narrative will normally involve both time and place.
Omniscient point of view
Figurative Language
Imagery
Setting
29. A technique that uses clues to suggest events that have not yet occurred - Often used to create suspense and thus make a story more interesting
Denotation
Legends
Novel
Foreshadowing
30. Songlike; characterized by emotion - subjectivity - and imagination.
Hyperbole
Allegory
Lyrical
Exposition
31. Any of several possible vantage points from which a story is told - May be omniscient - limited to that of a single character - or limited to that of several characters - as well as other possibilities. - The teller may use the first person and/or th
Figurative Language
Point of view
Analyzing Poetry: What is the structure of the poem?
Genre
32. A figure of speech in which intent and actual meaning differ - characteristically praise for blame or blame for praise; a pattern of words that turns away from direct statement of its own obvious meaning. The term irony implies a discrepancy. In verb
Iambic Pentameter
Connotation
Biography
Irony
33. An allegorical story designed to suggest a principle - illustrate a moral - or answer a question.
Parable
Tragedy
Strategy/Rhetorical strategy
Syllogism
34. Exposition - Rising action - Climax - Falling action - Denoument/resolution
Examples of folk tales
Dramatic structure/elements of fiction
Diction
Analyzing Poetry: Is the meaning clear?
35. Writing that seeks to arouse a reader's disapproval of an object by ridicule.- Usually comedy that exposes errors with an eye to correcting vice and folly.- Social criticism using wit. (Examples can be found in the novels of Charles Dickens - Mark Tw
Irony
Dramatic structure/elements of fiction
Satire
Novel
36. The images - sensory details - and figurative language of a literary work; words or phrases that appeal to the senses. The visual - auditory - or tactile images evoked by the words of a literary work and the images that figurative language evokes.'Th
Tone
Analyzing Poetry: What is the dramatic situation?
Imagery
Lyrical
37. A story in which people - things - and events have another meaning. (Orwell's Animal Farm) - Explaining meaning other than the words that are spoken - Conveys meaning through use of symbolic figures - actions - and symbolic representation - Extended
Flashback
Allegory
Prose
Parody
38. A composition that imitates the style of another composition - normally for comic effect.
Parody
Analyzing Poetry: What is the structure of the poem?
Short Story
Diction
39. Sometimes Shakespeare added an extra unstressed beat at the end of a line to emphasize a character's sense of contemplation (___________) - To BE - / or NOT / to BE: / that IS / the QUES- / - tion
Feminine ending
Autobiography
Dramatic structure/elements of fiction
novellas
40. Encompasses works written in verse - perhaps with a meter and rhyme scheme - and uses written language in a pattern that is sung - chanted - or spoken to emphasize the relationships between words and ideas on the basis of sound as well as meaning. Th
Biography
Poetry
Analyzing Poetry
Analyzing Poetry: What are the important images and figures of speech?
41. The management of language for a specific effect - In a poem - the planned pacing of elements to acheive an effect. Example: the rhetorical strategy of most love poems is deployed to convince the loved one to return the speaker's love. By appealing t
Simile
Poetry
Autobiography
Strategy/Rhetorical strategy
42. A directly expressed comparison; a figure of speech comparing two objects usually with 'like -' 'as -' or 'than.' It is easier to recognize than a metaphor because the comparison is explicit. 'My love is like a fever.'
Climax
Setting
Plot
Simile
43. The repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more words or syllables.
Exposition
Figurative Language
Alliteration
Hyperbole
44. Writing that uses figures of speech (as opposed to literal language or that which is actual or specifically denoted) - such as metaphors - similes - and irony. Figurative Language uses words to mean something other than their literal meaning. 'The bl
Free Verse
Figurative Language
Rising action
3 major categories of poetry
45. Not figurative; accurate to the letter; matter of fact or concrete.
Analyzing Poetry: What is the tone of the poem?
Lyrical
Prose
Literal
46. Can mean the mood or atmosphere of a work or a manner of speaking - but its most common use as a term of literary analysis is to denote the inferred attitude of an author - Author's attitude may be different from that of the speaker (usually the case
Foreshadowing
Personification
Analyzing Poetry: What is the tone of the poem?
Literal Language
47. A question asked for effect - not in expectation of a reply. No reply is expected because the question presupposes only one possible answer.
Point of view
Rhetorical question
Plot
Dramatic structure/elements of fiction
48. The arrangement of materials within a work; the relationship of the parts of a work to the whole; the logical divisions of a work. - The most common principles are series (A - B - C - D - E) - contrast (A vs. B - C vs. D - E vs. A) and repetition (AA
Structure
Attitude
Foreshadowing
Folk tales
49. A figurative use of language that endows nonhumans (ideas - inanimate objects - animals - abstractions) with human characteristics.
Alliteration
Narrative techniques
Personification
Oxymoron
50. Evoke events of a time long past - Generally concern the adventures and misadventures of gods - giants - heroes - nymphs - satyrs - and larger - than - life villains - all entities that reside outside of ordinary human existence yet are entwined in o
Thesis
Narrative techniques
Allegory
Myths