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Test your basic knowledge |
Praxis Middle School Language Arts
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
praxis
,
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. Meter that is composed of feet that are short - short - long or unaccented - unaccented - accented - usually used in light or whimsical poetry - such as limerick.
Profanity (diction)
Anapestic Meter
Horror
Essay
2. A person or being in a narrative
Character
Lyric
Parody
Essay
3. Old - fashioned words that are no longer used in common speech - such as thee - thy - and thou.
Diction
Archaic (diction)
Paradox
Symbol
4. A brief story that illustrates or makes a point.
Camera view
Denotation
Anecdote
Heroic couplet
5. Rhyme that occurs within a line of verse.
Double speak
Elegy
First Person
Internal rhyme
6. U U '
Anapestic
Denouement
Romance
verbal irony
7. ' U
Apostrophe
Narration
Trochaic (foot)
Epic
8. An expression that has been used so often that it loses its expressive power
Analogy
Protagonist
Characterization
Cliche
9. The writer says one thing and means another
verbal irony
Limited omniscient
Stanza
Horror
10. A verb form that usually ends in - ing or - ed.
Antagonist
Participle
End rhyme
Clause
11. A fourteen - line poem - usually written in iambic pentameter - with a varied rhyme scheme. Two main types are Petrarchan (or Italian) and the Shakespearean (or English). A Petrarchan opens with an octave that states a proposition and ends with a ses
Double speak
Euphemism
Connosance
Sonnet
12. A variation of a language used by people who live in a particular geographical area.
Dialect
Euphemism
Historical fiction
Allegory
13. The study of the structure of sentences.
Cliche
Analogy
Syntax
Hyperbole
14. The perspective from which a story is told.
Anapestic Meter
Point of View
Symbol
Colloquialisms (diction)
15. ' U U
Camera view
Romance
Rhetoric
Dactylic
16. The time and place in which the action of a story takes place.
Setting
Cliche
Euphemism
Diction
17. A word which names a person - place or thing. Ex. boy - river - friend - Mexico - triangle - day - school - truth - university - idea - John F. Kennedy - movie
Noun
Tragedy
Free verse
Style
18. The analysis of how sounds function in a language or dialect.
Phonology
Profanity (diction)
Paradox
Romance
19. A type of Japanese poem that is written in 17 syllables with three lines of five - seven - and five syllables - respectively. Expresses a single thought.
Voice
Frame tale
Haiku
Verse
20. A person or thing working against the hero of a literary work (the protagonist).
Participle
Noun
Antagonist
Metaphor
21. An extended fictional prose narrative.
Foot
Flashback
Archaic (diction)
Novel
22. A person - place - thing - or event used to represent something else - such as the white flag that represents surrender.
Narrative Point of View
Adverb
Symbol
Point of View
23. The narrator shares the thoughts and feelings of all the characters.
Narration
Omniscient
Tone
Dialect
24. A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect - as in I could sleep for a year or this book weighs a ton.
Camera view
Hyperbole
Profanity (diction)
Slang (diction)
25. Specialized language used in a particular field or content area
Document (letter - diary - journal)
Noun
Symbol
Jargon (diction)
26. The repetition of initial consonant sounds in words - such a 'Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.'
Antagonist
Article
Irony
Alliteration
27. Language that is intended to be evasive or to conceal. Ex. 'downsized' actually means fired or loss of job.
Adverb
Conjunction
First Person
Double speak
28. The study of the structure of words.
Allusion
Noun
Legend
Morphology
29. A short story or folktale that contains a moral - which may be expressed explicitly at the end as a maxim. Examples include The Country Mouse and the Town Mouse - The Tortoise and the Hare - and The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing.
Article
Fable
Novel
Novella
30. The story is told by someone outside the story.
Third Person
Style
Onomatopoeia
Character
31. A variety of a language used by people from a particular geographic area.
Verb
Caesura
Oxymoron
Dialect (diction)
32. Also known as a run - on line in poetry - _____ occurs when one line ends and continues onto the next line to complete meaning. For example the first line in Thoreau's poem 'My life has been the poem I would have writ -' and the second line completes
Cliche
Jargon
Enjambment
Essay
33. A method by which trained readers evaluate a piece of writing for its overall quality. There is no focus on one aspect of the writing.
Mystery
Holistic Scoring
Onomatopoeia
Characterization
34. The narrator shares the thoughts and feelings of one (or a few) character(s).
Novel
Ballad
Limited omniscient
Semantics
35. A novel set in the western U.S. featuring the experiences of cowboys and frontiersmen. Examples include Zane Grey's Riders of the Purple Sage and Trail Driver - Larry McMurty's Lonesome Dove - Conrad Richter's The Sea of Grass - Fran Striker's The Lo
4 sentence types
Metaphor
Alliteration
Western
36. A comparison of objects or ideas that appear to be different but are alike in some important way.
Document (letter - diary - journal)
Analogy
Ballad
Character
37. Language that shows disrespect for others or something sacred.
Profanity (diction)
Anecdote
Personification
Limited omniscient
38. Deals with current or future development of technological advances. Examples are Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse - Five - George Orwell's 1984 - Aldous Huxley's Brave New World - and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451.
Dactylic
Anapestic
Science fiction
Foot
39. A story about a person's life written by another person.
Biography
Moral
Jargon (diction)
Hubris
40. Distinctive features of a person's speech and speech patterns.
Assonance
Cliche
Vulgarity
Voice
41. Narrative fiction that involves gods and heroes or has a theme that expresses a culture's ideology. Examples of Greek ______ include Zeus and the Olympians and The Trojan War. Roman ______ include Hercules - Apollo - and Venus.
Repetition
Myth
Fantasy
Refrain
42. The story is told from the point of view of one character.
First Person
Voice
Ambiguity
Third Person
43. The telling of a story.
Narration
Science fiction
Euphemism
Article
44. A metric line of poetry. Its name is based on the kind and number of feet composing it ('foot').
Mystery
Verse
Epic
Paradox
45. A person who opposes or competes with the main character (protagonist); often the villain in the story.
Meter
Conjunction
Limerick
Antagonist
46. The feeling a text evokes in the reader - such as sadness - tranquility - or elation.
Trochaic (foot)
Imagery
Mood
Camera view
47. Expressions that are usually accepted in informal situations or regions - such as 'wicked awesome.'
Point of View
Dialect (diction)
Paradox
Colloquialisms (diction)
48. A humorous verse form of five anapestic (Composed of feet that are short - short - long or unaccented - unaccented - accented) lines with rhyme scheme of aabba.
Limerick
Legend
Colloquialisms (diction)
Allusion
49. The reader sees a character's errors - but the character does not
dramatic irony
Pronoun
Archaic (diction)
Dactylic
50. A metrical ______ is defined as one stressed syllable and a number of unstressed syllables (from zero to as many as four). Stressed syllables are indicated by the ? symbol. Unstressed syllables are indicated by the ? symbol. There are four possible t
Repetition
Ambiguity
Assonance
Foot