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Test your basic knowledge |
AP Literary Terms
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
english
,
ap
,
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. A character or force in a work of literature that - by opposing the protagonist produces tension or conflict
antagonist
euphemism
Gothic novel
Old English
2. A figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated. Ex: 'The White House says...'
apostrophe
heroic couplet
plot
metonymy
3. A story consisting of events from which a moral or spiritual truth may be derived
satire
parable
Gothic novel
setting
4. The emotional tone in a work of literature
foot
light verse
motif
mood
5. A grotesque likeness of striking qualities in persons and things
motif
empathy
caricature
novel of manners
6. A brief explanation - summary - or evaluation of a text or work of literature
falling action
rhetorical stance
lampoon
annotation
7. The action in a play or story that occurs after the climax and that leads to the conclusion and often to the resolution of the conflict
empathy
falling action
expose
paradox
8. A comparison that points out similarities between two dissimilar things
ellipsis
trope
flashback
analogy
9. The background and events that lead to the presentation of the main idea or purpose of a work of literature
irony
image
exposition
empathy
10. The repetition of one or more initial consonants in a group of words or lines of poetry or prose
alliteration
synecdoche
dramatic irony
simile
11. The role or facade that a character assumes or depicts to a reader - a viewer - or the world at large
persona
symbolism
alliteration
expose
12. A statement or idea that fails to follow logically from the one before
non sequitur
muse
verbal irony
pathos
13. A novel focusing on and describing the social customs and habits of a particular social group
pentameter
pun
ottava rima
novel of manners
14. A person - scene - event - or other element in literature that fails to correspond with the time or era in which the work is set
adage
rhythm
anachronism
picaresque novel
15. A poem or prose selection that laments or mediates on the passing or death of something or someone of value
sarcasm
Middle English
elegy
Old English
16. A poet; in olden times - a performer who told heroic stories to musical accompaniment
connotation
burlesque
bard
bathos
17. Novels written for mass consumption - often emphasizing exciting and titillating plots
pulp fiction
pastoral
oxymoron
pun
18. A structure that provides premise or setting for a narrative
wit
frame
coming-of-age story
persona
19. The grammar of meter and rhythm in poetry
bibliography
enjambment
picaresque novel
prosody
20. A return to an earlier time in a story or play in order to clarify present action or circumstances.
kenning
cacophony
blank verse
flashback
21. A vagueness of meaning; a conscious lack of clarity meant to evoke multiple meanings and interpretation
eponymous
kenning
image
ambiguity
22. The high point - or turning point - of a story or play
climax
plot
versification
aphorism
23. A verse with five poetic feet per line
climax
foot
onomatopoeia
pentameter
24. A popular form of verse consisting of fourteen lines and a prescribed rhyme scheme.
empathy
first-person narrative
elegy
sonnet
25. A literary style used to poke fun at - attack - or ridicule an idea - vice - or foible - often for the purpose of inducing change
alliteration
montage
genre
satire
26. A phrase - idea - or event that through repetition serves to unify or convey a theme in a work of literature
first-person narrative
fable
motif
allegory
27. A unit of stressed and unstressed syllables used to determine the meter of a poetic line.
kenning
foot
Apollonian
humanism
28. The pattern of rhymes within a given poem
epithet
rhyme scheme
fable
protagonist
29. A term consisting of contradictory elements juxtaposed to create a paradoxical effect
paraphrase
falling action
figurative language
oxymoron
30. A discrepancy between the true meaning of a situation and the literal meaning of the written or spoken words
theme
verbal irony
sentimental
exposition
31. A cleansing of the spirit brought about by the pity and terror of a dramatic tragedy
extended metaphor
pulp fiction
plot
catharsis
32. A simple narrative verse that tells a story that is sung or recited
point of view
mode
ballad
pathos
33. A form of literature in which the hero is destroyed by some character flaw and a set of forces that cause the hero considerable anguish
tragedy
symbolism
alliteration
free verse
34. A saying or proverb expressing common wisdom or truth
maxim
style
carpe diem
in medias res
35. A figure of speech in which a part signifies the whole ('fifty masts' for fifty ships) or the whole signifies the part ('days' for life - as in 'He lived his days in Canada'). Also when the name of the material stands for the thing itself ('pigskin'
irony
synecdoche
archetype
climax
36. A piece of writing that reveals weaknesses - faults - frailties - or other shortcomings
meter
hyperbole
expose
deus ex machina
37. The author's attitude toward the subject being written about. The spirit or quality that is the work's emotional essence
rhythm
tone
ode
mode
38. The structural form of a line of verse as revealed by the number of feet it contains. For example: monometer = 1foot; tetrameter = 4 feet; pentameter = 5 feet - and so forth
belle-lettres
ambiguity
versification
fable
39. An abstract or ideal conception of a type; a perfectly typical example; an original model or form
subtext
satire
villanelle
archetype
40. 'In the middle of things'--a Latin term for a narrative that starts not at the beginning of events - but at some other critical point.
in medias res
trope
analogy
prosody
41. A story in which the narrative or characters carry an underlying symbolic - metaphorical - or possibly an ethical meaning
litotes
allegory
wit
sonnet
42. Two rhymed lines written in iambic pentameter and used widely in eighteenth-century verse.
quatrain
heroic couplet
frame
melodrama
43. Pleasing - harmonious sounds
euphony
sonnet
pathetic fallacy
lyric poetry
44. A story containing unreal - imaginary features
fantasy
style
expose
rhetorical stance
45. An eight-line rhyming stanza of a poem
Old English
climax
ottava rima
protagonist
46. The total environment for the action in a novel or play. It includes time - place - historical milieu - and social - political - and even spiritual circumstances
simile
setting
expose
farce
47. A short tale often featuring nonhuman characters that act as people whose actions enable the author to make observations or draw useful lessons about human behavior
subplot
fable
free verse
fantasy
48. A direct verbal assault; a denunciation
invective
simile
rhyme scheme
fantasy
49. A comedy that contains an extravagant and nonsensical disregard of seriousness - although it may have a serious - scornful purpose.
first-person narrative
subtext
loose sentence
farce
50. The repetition of two or more consonant sounds in a group of words or a line of poetry
hubris
consonance
enjambment
genre