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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP College Composition
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
writing-skills
,
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. Example based on supposition or uncertainty
hypothetic example
analogy
third person omniscient
burlesque
2. A speaker directly addresses something or someone not living - that cannot answer back
induction
consonance
apostrophe
semicolon
3. One of many conjunctive adverbs
third person limited
assertion
accordingly
compound complex sentence
4. Quality in literature that appeals to the audience's emotions
pathos
pastoral elegy
Alexandrine
generality organization
5. Observable - measurable - easily perceived
participle
accordingly
false dilemma
concrete
6. Descriptive language to evoke the senses
epigram
circular reasoning
imagery
digress
7. A short quotation or verse that precedes text that sets the tone or provides a setting
epigram
assonance
rebuttal
protagonist
8. Further information about the subject (predicate must contain the verb)
predicate
second person
cause-effect organization
episodic
9. Basically an 'either or' situation - typically a moral decision
metonymy
Auxiliary verb
dilemma
episodic
10. Something that is implied
implicit
wit
cause and effect
fiction
11. The commentator does not mean what she writes
Auxiliary verb
allusion
ironic commentary
satire
12. Abbaabba cdecde or abbaabba cdcdcd
third person omniscient
tongue-in-cheek
third person limited
Italian rhyme
13. Essay that presents information about two or more things - events - or ideas in order to compare them
comparison organization
candor
repetition
truism
14. An explosion of harsh language that usually vilifies or condemns an idea
negation
analogy
diatribe
feminine rhyme
15. Opposing point of view
rebuttal
explicit
digress
analogical comparison
16. A figure of speech in the form of a question posed for persuasive effect without the expectation of a reply
inference
rhetorical question
cadence
subordinate conjunction
17. A comic tool of satire - ridiculous exaggeration or distortion
burlesque
idealism
synecdoche
generality organization
18. To illustrate how a claim can be true in some ways and false in others
negation
qualifying a claim
emphatic organization
second person
19. The work is narrated using a name or third person pronoun ie - he - she - etc.
third person
anecdote
vocative
capital
20. Understatement created through double negative
explicit
abstract
litotes
subjunctive
21. A saying or expression that proposes to tell the truth
dilemma
antithesis balanced
maxim
tone
22. Refined taste - tact - the ability to avoid distress or embarrassment
first person
subjunctive
discretion
mock
23. Appearing in episodes - a long string of short individual scenes
subordinate conjunction
analogy
figurative language
episodic
24. An attack on an opposing view to weaken - invalidate - or make it less credible
second person
epigram
footnote
refutation
25. The order of words in a sentence - also the types and structures of sentences
antithesis
indicative
syntax
chronological organization
26. Essay pattern in which the writer shows the immediate and underlying causes that led to an event or situation
predicate
cause and effect
assertion
propaganda
27. 'ed' form of a verb - 'Bettina played with the children'
apostrophe
footnote
negation
participle
28. The official 'headquarters' of a state or nation - its actual location or area
decorum
under
refutation
capital
29. An indirect attack or insinuation
comparison organization
catalog
innuendo
caesura
30. A phrase that refers to a person or object by single important feature of that person or object
subjunctive
diction
damn with faint praise
synecdoche
31. Short narrative of an amusing - unusual - revealing or interesting event
problem-solution organization
pastoral elegy
figurative language
anecdote
32. The pause that breaks a line of Old English verse
dilemma
oxymoron
caesura
hypothetic example
33. To move off point
propaganda
capitol
digress
bias
34. Used to introduce a long quotation - list
cause and effect
fallacy
diatribe
colon
35. The act or practice of envisioning things in an ideal form; seeing things as they could be
idealism
imperative
propaganda
participle
36. Innocence in perception - lack of worldly knowledge
naivete
concrete
antagonist
symbol
37. Reasoning by which a general statement is reached on the basis of particular examples
qualifying a claim
pathos
induction
antithesis
38. Consists of a single independent clause
simple sentence
feminine rhyme
empirical
gerund
39. Example - this white wine goes well with this fish
rebuttal
understatement
complement
soapstone
40. Vowel rhyme
abstract noun
subordinate conjunction
assonance
damn with faint praise
41. List of details that reinforces a concept
catalog
accordingly
bias
Auxiliary verb
42. Main idea of an essay - what the writer hope to prove is true
idiom
counterexample
rebuttal
thesis
43. Expressly stated
diction
generality organization
explicit
chronological organization
44. The verb and its object and modifiers
verb phrase
abstract
comparison organization
thesis
45. A line of iambic hexameter; the final line of a Spenserian stanza is alexandrine
synaesthesia
infinitive
Alexandrine
gerund
46. A word that introduces a subordinate clause - i.e. 'Since you're awake - I'll turn on the radio'
subordinate conjunction
imagery
compound sentence
footnote
47. The work is narrated by the person 'I' - who can also be the protagonist - omniscient speaker. There can be multiple narrators of the same work
empirical
first person
idealism
pathetic fallacy
48. Humorous or ironic statement not meant to be taken literally
implicit
tongue-in-cheek
dilemma
decorum
49. An error of reasoning based on faulty use of evidence
indicative
empirical
repetition
fallacy
50. A variety of literary devices i.e. - anaphora - repeating
repetition
pathetic fallacy
Shakespearean rhyme
emphatic organization