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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. Observable - measurable - easily perceived
digress
understatement
concrete
catalog
2. Third-person narrator tells another's story using third-person pronouns
circular reasoning
third person limited
vocative
abstract noun
3. Referring to phrases that suggest an interplay of the senses - ie 'hot pink' or 'golden voice'
synaesthesia
analogy
epigram
digress
4. A statement that is obviously true and says nothing new or interesting
feminine rhyme
allegory
truism
abstract
5. A short quotation or verse that precedes text that sets the tone or provides a setting
cause and effect
epigram
pathetic fallacy
imagery
6. The claim or point that the writer is making
first person
circumlocution
assertion
capitol
7. To place side by side in order to show similarities or differences
maxim
juxtapose
antecedent
diction
8. To write around a subject - evasively - say nothing
verb phrase
maxim
circumlocution
extended metaphor
9. A phrase that refers to a person or object by a single important feature - ie 'the pen is mightier than the sword'
epithalamium
metonymy
negation
compound sentence
10. Basically an 'either or' situation - typically a moral decision
negation
cadence
extended metaphor
dilemma
11. A work or poem written to celebrate a wedding
epithalamium
soapstone
truism
bias
12. The verb and its object and modifiers
problem-solution organization
since
ethos
verb phrase
13. Essay that presents information in order of importance - either most important to least important or vice versa
tone
emphatic organization
complement
over generalization
14. Vague - not easily defined
footnote
antithesis balanced
abstract
analogical comparison
15. Short narrative of an amusing - unusual - revealing or interesting event
empirical
antecedent
innuendo
anecdote
16. A figure of speech in which two contradictory elements are combined for effect - i.e. 'random order'
juxtapose
anecdote
neutrality
oxymoron
17. Used to introduce a long quotation - list
litotes
abstraction
ethos
colon
18. Can be verified
fact
assertion
colloquial
idiom
19. The main character - usually the hero
apostrophe
decorum
circumlocution
protagonist
20. Type of faulty reasoning in which the writer attempts to support a statement by repeating the statement in different or stronger language
metaphor
circular reasoning
allegory
symbol
21. Appearing in episodes - a long string of short individual scenes
voice
epigram
episodic
assonance
22. To give human attributes or qualities to something nonliving or nonhuman
personification
induction
Alexandrine
compound sentence
23. An interpretation of the facts based on available details
semicolon
catalog
capital
inference
24. A preference or inclination - especially one that inhibits impartial judgment
refutation
Auxiliary verb
wit
bias
25. A type of poem that takes the form of a lament for the dead sung by a shepherd
second person
pastoral elegy
mock
third person limited
26. A line of iambic hexameter; the final line of a Spenserian stanza is alexandrine
repetition
bias
maxim
Alexandrine
27. Essay that presents information about the causes of some known or likely outcome - how different causes contribute to the outcome
paradox
truism
subordinate conjunction
cause-effect organization
28. Vowel rhyme
analogical comparison
Auxiliary verb
assonance
imagery
29. Main idea of an essay - what the writer hope to prove is true
thesis
understatement
anticlimax
juxtapose
30. An event or experience that causes disappointment because it is less exciting than what was expected
truism
pathos
anticlimax
double entendre
31. An explosion of harsh language that usually vilifies or condemns an idea
neutrality
antithesis
diatribe
burlesque
32. A humorous imitation of an original text meant to ridicule - often used in satire
paraody
refutation
idiom
synecdoche
33. Used to link two independent clauses of parallel connection
assertion
semicolon
colon
synecdoche
34. The opposite of an idea used to emphasize a point
anecdote
litotes
antithesis
simile
35. 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
imagery
generality organization
pathos
first person
36. The order of words in a sentence - also the types and structures of sentences
concrete
juxtapose
thesis
syntax
37. The rhythm of phrases or sentences created through repetitive elements
bias
cadence
doggerel
assonance
38. The pause that breaks a line of Old English verse
caesura
exemplar
onomatopoeia
wit
39. Imagined - even while it may possess truthful elements - it cannot be verified
fiction
catalog
simple sentence
third person limited
40. Essay pattern in which the writer shows the immediate and underlying causes that led to an event or situation
under
synecdoche
cause and effect
discretion
41. Further information about the subject (predicate must contain the verb)
semicolon
Shakespearean rhyme
generality organization
predicate
42. Example based on supposition or uncertainty
ironic commentary
personification
damn with faint praise
hypothetic example
43. Words that mean the opposite of their literal meaning - i.e. 'how wonderful that you wrecked your car!'
assertion
refutation
irony
hypothetic example
44. The metaphor forms the basis for the entire work - extends throughout the work or passage
decorum
subjunctive
irony
extended metaphor
45. Expressed of direct address - i.e. 'Sit - Bettina - sit!'
wit
alliteration
third person limited
vocative
46. A variety of literary devices i.e. - anaphora - repeating
metaphor
repetition
extended metaphor
mock
47. Verb used to express conditional or counterfactual statements - i.e. 'If I were rich'
subjunctive
predicate
ethos
ironic commentary
48. Abab cdcd efef gg
feminine rhyme
capital
problem-solution organization
Shakespearean rhyme
49. Abab bcbc cdcd ee
paraody
understatement
since
Spenserian rhyme
50. Descriptive language to evoke the senses
epithalamium
epigram
imagery
caesura