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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. The act or practice of envisioning things in an ideal form; seeing things as they could be
participle
accordingly
idealism
doggerel
2. Essay that presents information in order of occurrence - or sequence of events
Auxiliary verb
chronological organization
consonance
wit
3. Reasoning by which a general statement is reached on the basis of particular examples
rhetorical question
abstract noun
inference
induction
4. Quiet reflection upon a topic
framing
syntax
musing
refutation
5. Refined taste - tact - the ability to avoid distress or embarrassment
personification
episodic
discretion
inference
6. Information distributed to promote a specific cause usually of a biased or misleading nature
epithalamium
inference
digress
propaganda
7. ... - used to indicate omission of words or letters
explicit
doggerel
ellipsis
circumlocution
8. A concept or idea without a specific example; idealized generalizations
hyperbole
abstraction
diction
synecdoche
9. Basically an 'either or' situation - typically a moral decision
idealism
fallacy
understatement
dilemma
10. An event or experience that causes disappointment because it is less exciting than what was expected
anticlimax
analogy
footnote
personification
11. Repetition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession
capital
figurative language
consonance
epigram
12. Expressly stated
dilemma
allusion
explicit
implicit
13. 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
first person
Auxiliary verb
Shakespearean rhyme
cause and effect
14. Type of faulty reasoning in which the writer attempts to support a statement by repeating the statement in different or stronger language
anticlimax
juxtapose
tone
circular reasoning
15. A saying or expression that proposes to tell the truth
maxim
compound sentence
propaganda
cadence
16. Essay pattern in which the writer shows the immediate and underlying causes that led to an event or situation
vernacular
simile
antithesis balanced
cause and effect
17. A type of literature that exposes idiocy - corruption - or other human folly - through humor - exaggeration - irony
indicative
repetition
parallel structure
satire
18. The verb and its object and modifiers
capital
infinitive
verb phrase
dilemma
19. Opposing point of view
rebuttal
framing
alliteration
apostrophe
20. An error of reasoning based on faulty use of evidence
fallacy
framing
accordingly
onomatopoeia
21. Saying less than is warranted by the situation in order to emphasize reality
understatement
parallel structure
antithesis
Auxiliary verb
22. Understatement created through double negative
litotes
circumlocution
compound complex sentence
ironic commentary
23. List of details that reinforces a concept
epigram
catalog
antecedent
idiom
24. Imagined - even while it may possess truthful elements - it cannot be verified
fiction
abstract noun
chronological organization
oxymoron
25. Innocence in perception - lack of worldly knowledge
innuendo
candor
naivete
rebuttal
26. A variety of literary devices i.e. - anaphora - repeating
repetition
framing
candor
apostrophe
27. An indirect attack or insinuation
analogy
innuendo
caesura
Auxiliary verb
28. Verb used to express conditional or counterfactual statements - i.e. 'If I were rich'
third person
assonance
tongue-in-cheek
subjunctive
29. To give human attributes or qualities to something nonliving or nonhuman
antithesis
capitol
fact
personification
30. Ideas or things that can mean many things to many people - such as peace - honor
chronological organization
abstract noun
circumlocution
abstraction
31. Consists or two or more simple sentences joined by a common and coordinating conjunction - or by a semicolon
compound sentence
emphatic organization
indicative
accordingly
32. The ordinary - everyday speech of a region
empirical
imagery
vernacular
third person limited
33. Not taking a position
voice
figurative language
cadence
neutrality
34. Rarely used - the writer uses the pronoun 'you' making the reader an active participant in the work
second person
colon
diction
bias
35. The perspective from which a story is written
personification
paradox
Alexandrine
voice
36. To write around a subject - evasively - say nothing
refutation
paraody
circumlocution
complement
37. Language that is not meant to be taken literally - such as metaphor - simile - personification - metonymy
propaganda
repetition
figurative language
burlesque
38. Drawing conclusions from insufficient evidence
syntax
compliment
over generalization
personification
39. Open - honest communication
candor
circumlocution
epithalamium
alliteration
40. A preference or inclination - especially one that inhibits impartial judgment
bias
litotes
epithet
over generalization
41. Simplifying a complex problem into an either or dichotomy
false dilemma
negation
simile
assertion
42. The speaker - author - or narrator's attitude toward a person - place - idea - or thing
tone
epigram
anticlimax
hypothetic example
43. A verb acting as a noun - usually 'ing' form of the verb
gerund
fiction
cause-effect organization
understatement
44. The juxtaposition of incongruous or conflicting ideas that reveals a truth or insight
paradox
voice
compound sentence
imperative
45. Abbaabba cdecde or abbaabba cdcdcd
explicit
cadence
personification
Italian rhyme
46. An exception to a proposed general rule
counterexample
accordingly
infinitive
rebuttal
47. The opposite of an idea used to emphasize a point
pastoral elegy
ironic commentary
qualifying a claim
antithesis
48. The pause that breaks a line of Old English verse
cause-effect organization
caesura
antagonist
Spenserian rhyme
49. Abab cdcd efef gg
vernacular
Shakespearean rhyme
rebuttal
fallacy
50. A line of iambic hexameter; the final line of a Spenserian stanza is alexandrine
colon
Alexandrine
burlesque
ironic commentary