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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. An indirect attack or insinuation
innuendo
Spenserian rhyme
tongue-in-cheek
damn with faint praise
2. A figure of speech
concrete
idiom
counterexample
empirical
3. Referring to phrases that suggest an interplay of the senses - ie 'hot pink' or 'golden voice'
cause-effect organization
false dilemma
comparison organization
synaesthesia
4. The metaphor forms the basis for the entire work - extends throughout the work or passage
colon
extended metaphor
pathetic fallacy
antithesis balanced
5. Used to introduce a long quotation - list
refutation
qualifying a claim
synaesthesia
colon
6. A statement that is obviously true and says nothing new or interesting
truism
complement
colon
personification
7. The work is narrated using a name or third person pronoun ie - he - she - etc.
juxtapose
third person
negation
dilemma
8. Not taking a position
problem-solution organization
neutrality
simile
hyperbole
9. (1) a short poetic nickname; (2) a term used to describe the name or title of a person -ie 'The Great Emancipator' for Abraham Lincoln; (3) an abusive slur
epithet
Auxiliary verb
idiom
cadence
10. The juxtaposition of incongruous or conflicting ideas that reveals a truth or insight
paradox
colloquial
damn with faint praise
episodic
11. Short narrative of an amusing - unusual - revealing or interesting event
concrete
anecdote
antagonist
vocative
12. To make fun of
mock
syntax
negation
alliteration
13. A thing - idea - or person that stands for something else
metaphor
symbol
idealism
exemplar
14. Drawing conclusions from insufficient evidence
decorum
epigram
juxtapose
over generalization
15. A verb used for issuing commands - 'Do it now!'
imperative
imagery
extended metaphor
bias
16. Consists of a single independent clause
tone
simple sentence
consonance
refutation
17. Lines rhymed by their final two syllables - i.e. running and gunning
subjunctive
alliteration
feminine rhyme
idealism
18. Simplifying a complex problem into an either or dichotomy
false dilemma
qualifying a claim
refutation
assonance
19. Unconjugated verb with 'to' in front of it
empirical
third person
under
infinitive
20. Ideas or things that can mean many things to many people - such as peace - honor
third person limited
irony
satire
abstract noun
21. Type of faulty reasoning in which the writer attempts to support a statement by repeating the statement in different or stronger language
circular reasoning
simple sentence
capitol
cadence
22. A phrase that refers to a person or object by single important feature of that person or object
allegory
generality organization
synecdoche
truism
23. Imagined - even while it may possess truthful elements - it cannot be verified
abstract
fiction
hyperbole
innuendo
24. The commentator does not mean what she writes
emphatic organization
ironic commentary
compound complex sentence
paradox
25. The ordinary - everyday speech of a region
propaganda
infinitive
vernacular
burlesque
26. Repetition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession
consonance
third person limited
ellipsis
hypothetic example
27. The official 'headquarters' of a state or nation - its actual location or area
vocative
capitol
capital
protagonist
28. A figure of speech in which sharply contrasting ideas are juxtaposed in a balanced or parallel phrase or grammatical structure - i.e. 'to err is human; to forgive - divine'
antithesis balanced
diatribe
third person
repetition
29. A negative statement
negation
figurative language
burlesque
oxymoron
30. Saying less than is warranted by the situation in order to emphasize reality
figurative language
pathos
understatement
ethos
31. To give human attributes or qualities to something nonliving or nonhuman
satire
since
personification
syntax
32. Combines a compound sentence with a complex sentence
footnote
comparison organization
compound complex sentence
rhetorical question
33. Verb used to express conditional or counterfactual statements - i.e. 'If I were rich'
subjunctive
metonymy
refutation
implicit
34. Quiet reflection upon a topic
imperative
musing
fact
concrete
35. One of many conjunctive adverbs
accordingly
first person
soapstone
simile
36. Something that is implied
implicit
caesura
epithalamium
empirical
37. Acronym for basic elements of nonfictional text - speaker - occasion - audience - purpose - subject - tone
antithesis
burlesque
diatribe
soapstone
38. The pause that breaks a line of Old English verse
gerund
abstraction
caesura
problem-solution organization
39. A reference to something in culture - history or literature that expands the depth of the text that allows the reader to make a 'connection'
pastoral elegy
propaganda
allusion
epigram
40. Verb in present tense - 'Bettina plays with children'
imperative
catalog
indicative
exemplar
41. A metaphor using 'like' or 'as' in the comparison
paradox
consonance
thesis
simile
42. An attack on an opposing view to weaken - invalidate - or make it less credible
truism
refutation
verb phrase
maxim
43. Condemn by seeming to offer praise - ie 'well - I could not have done better myself'
episodic
negation
digress
damn with faint praise
44. Referring to local custom or sayings; regional language or behavior
Italian rhyme
colloquial
ironic commentary
analogy
45. The order of words in a sentence - also the types and structures of sentences
participle
chronological organization
syntax
gerund
46. Information distributed to promote a specific cause usually of a biased or misleading nature
first person
propaganda
fallacy
gerund
47. An explosion of harsh language that usually vilifies or condemns an idea
diatribe
analogical comparison
hypothetic example
compound complex sentence
48. A line of iambic hexameter; the final line of a Spenserian stanza is alexandrine
Alexandrine
third person omniscient
capital
cause-effect organization
49. Abab bcbc cdcd ee
Alexandrine
subjunctive
empirical
Spenserian rhyme
50. A group of words acting as a noun - i.e. 'Playing the guitar is extremely difficult'
soapstone
abstract
substantive
tone