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Test your basic knowledge |
AP Latin Rhetorical Figures
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
languages
,
ap
,
latin
Instructions:
Answer 36 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. Implied comparison
Alliteration
Metaphor
Simile
Enjambment/Enjambement
2. Comparison using 'like' or 'as'
Ecphrasis
Anaphora
Simile
Chiasmus
3. An omission of conjunctions in a series
Hyberbole
Asyndaton
Ecphrasis
Allegory
4. Use of a word before it is appropriate; leaves the reader hanging until the thought is completed (usually a verb comes between an adjective and the noun it modifies)
Allegory
Zeugma
Prolepsis
Propsopopoeia
5. Attributing some characteristic of one thing to another thing
Metonomy
Transferred Epithet
Enjambment/Enjambement
Hyberbole
6. Separation of parts of a compund word
Tmesis
Polyptoton
Personification
Elipsis
7. Three like phrases in a row - three relative clauses - three prep clauses - etc
Anaphora
Tricolon Trescens
Praeteritio
Elipsis
8. When words that belong together naturally are separated for effect.
Pleonasm
Hyperbaton
Zeugma
Chiasmus
9. An exageration without like or as
Apostrophe
Personification
Polyptoton
Hyberbole
10. Repitition of sounds - usually vowel sounds.
Metonomy
Assonance
Oxymoron
Aposiopesis
11. Using words in context where the meaning is contrary to the situation
Praeteritio
Irony
Alliteration
Hyperbaton
12. A formal description - often used in epic to make a transition to a new scene
Ecphrasis
Propsopopoeia
Tricolon Trescens
Tmesis
13. The expression of an idea using two nouns joined with an 'and' but translated 'Of'
Hysteron Proteron
Hendiadys
Asyndaton
Assonance
14. Contradictory words in the same phrase
Synchysis
Transferred Epithet
Metonomy
Oxymoron
15. Omission of one or more words necessary to the sense.
Zeugma
Chiasmus
Elipsis
Hyperbaton
16. Use of words whose sound suggest the sense
Onomatopoeia
Zeugma
Asyndaton
Irony
17. When the object of a preposition precedes the preposition.
Propsopopoeia
Hysteron Proteron
Personification
Anastrophe
18. Arrangement of words in ABBA order.
Chiasmus
Zeugma
Ecphrasis
Anaphora
19. A narrative in which abstract ideas (love - rumor - knowledge) figure as circumstances or persons usually to enforce a deeper moral truth
Polyptoton
Litotes
Allegory
Oxymoron
20. Saying what one says will not be said
Pleonasm
Synchysis
Polysyndaton
Praeteritio
21. Use of excessive conjunctions
Polysyndaton
Litotes
Tricolon Trescens
Propsopopoeia
22. Repitition of a word - usually at the begining of a clause or phrase. Used for emphasis.
Anaphora
Zeugma
Personification
Ecphrasis
23. An inversion of the natural order of speech(reversal of logical word order)
Pleonasm
Propsopopoeia
Hysteron Proteron
Litotes
24. An abrupt failure to complete a sentence.
Aposiopesis
Hendiadys
Hyberbole
Metaphor
25. Assigning inanimate objects human qualities
Synedoche
Synchysis
Personification
Aposiopesis
26. Double negative - understatement
Apostrophe
Litotes
Allegory
Elipsis
27. Repitition of key word with slight change to form
Allegory
Aposiopesis
Asyndaton
Polyptoton
28. Interlocking word order ABAB
Apostrophe
Tmesis
Ecphrasis
Synchysis
29. Use of words of same or similar meaning
Transferred Epithet
Elipsis
Anaphora
Pleonasm
30. Repitition of the same sounds in two or more words. usually applies to consonants and accented initial vowels.
Allegory
Ecphrasis
Synedoche
Alliteration
31. An address to some one or thing not present.
Apostrophe
Elipsis
Prolepsis
Chiasmus
32. Assumption of another persons character
Polysyndaton
Asyndaton
Transferred Epithet
Propsopopoeia
33. Use of one closely conected noun in place of another
Asyndaton
Metonomy
Hyperbaton
Chiasmus
34. Happens in poetry. Closely related words are split between one line and the next - often used by a poet to bind a poem together. It also adds the benefit of a pause before the completion of a thought.
Praeteritio
Tmesis
Enjambment/Enjambement
Synchysis
35. Substituting part for the whole
Apostrophe
Synedoche
Hysteron Proteron
Enjambment/Enjambement
36. Joining of dissimilar words in a unit
Polyptoton
Pleonasm
Elipsis
Zeugma