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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP English Literature All In One
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
literature
,
english
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 speech conventionally understood to convey the private thought of the character who delivers it
Daniel Defoe
Enjambment
Medieval Period
Soliloquy
2. A poem that treats the subject of the couple's wedding night
Epithalamium
Enjambment
Tetralogy
Epistles
3. A short - carefully constructed scene in a film - play - etc.; specif. - one regarded as subtle - sensitive - etc
Prosody
Bidungsroman
Vignette
Connotation
4. An important narrative form that emerges at the threshold between orality and literacy. They are written down at some point after a period of oral development. Beowulf is considered an epic.
Irony
Epic
Marginalization
Christopher Marlowe
5. A term used in deconstruction - absence of meaning and multiplicity of possible meaning within a text
Metaphysical poetry
Aporia
First Folio
Samuel Johnson
6. A collection of works on a common theme such as Charlemagne or the Trojan War. Cycles typically represent the work of several different authors brought together into a group. Cycles are often groups of romance narrative.
Stream-of-consciousness
Cycle
Rhyme scheme
Verisimilitude
7. A long - blustering - noisy - or scolding speech; tirade
Prosody
Vignette
Harangue
Theater of the absurd
8. Refers to the sound and structure of poetry - including meter - rhyme - assonance - and alliteration
Prosody
Fashionable novel
Chivalry
Aubade
9. Heroic poetry with an important subject of crucial national or cultural significance - together with a grand - lofty tone. Many epics tell the story of the founding of a nation or race by means of battle or journey
Connotation
Epic
Free indirect discourse
Villanelle
10. The most common meter in English verse. It consists of a line ten syllables long that is accented on every second beat (see blank verse). These lines in iambic pentameter are from The Merchant of Venice - by William Shakespeare:In sooth -/I know/not
Aubade
Iambic pentameter
Enjambment
Ode
11. Made up of the ideas - beliefs - and values shared by members of a society. Ideology is shaped by political interests and serves power interests in ways we might not recognize
Ideology
Imagery
Medieval Period
Tetralogy
12. Romantic period;
Wilfred Owen
Iambic pentameter
William Wordsworth
Romantic Period
13. The secondary significance a word acquires through association that goes beyond its literal meaning
Aubade
Wilfred Owen
Connotation
Panegyric
14. Genre in poetry. Its formal - meditative - and intense.
Imagery
Satire
Panegyric
Ode
15. Designating or characteristic of a kind of fiction that originated in Spain and deals episodically with the adventures of a hero who is or resembles such a vagabond or rogue
Free indirect discourse
Picaresque
Sublime
New Criticism
16. One of three sections of the Greek dramatic chorus and the Pindaric ode - along with the strophe and antistrophe. These forms may be repeated in sequence within a single ode.
Mystery plays
Ode
Epode
Aubade
17. Early Medieval Period; The protagonist of the poem. Beowulf is a Geatish hero who fights the monster Grendel - Grendel's mother - and a fire-breathing dragon. Beowulf's exploits prove him to be the strongest - ablest warrior of his time. In his youth
Satire
Beowulf
Condition of England novel
Enjambment
18. Anything that isn't tangible. In literature - it can be opposed to imagery - the representation of tangible things
Abstraction
Hyperbole
Wilfred Owen
Daniel Defoe
19. Novels about gruesome doings and supernatural horrors - usually set far away and long ago. The form emerged during the eighteenth century but gained popularity and respectability in the nineteenth - as the imagination in literature came to be more hi
Epode
Marginalization
Gothic novels
Harangue
20. Augustan Period
Sensation
terza rima
Samuel Johnson
Cycle
21. The use of a single word in two different senses at once. For example: I just quit smoking and my job.
Syllepsis
Beowulf
Strophe
Aestheticism
22. A group of four works
William Wordsworth
Tetralogy
Charles Dickens
Gothic novels
23. A rhyming pair of iambic-pentameter lines - first used extensively in English by Chaucer and later developed as a syntactically complete unit - esp. by Dryden and Pope (Ex.: 'In every work regard the writer's end - Since none can compass more than th
Rhyming Couplet
Tetralogy
heroic couple
Panegyric
24. The pattern of rhymes in a stanza
Assonance
Neo-Platonism
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Rhyme scheme
25. (1540-1640) public theaters presented plays that celebrated a semifluid social order governed by absolute power. These dramas portrayed any unchecked social mobility that might threaten state stability as the result of personal evil - corruption - an
William Wordsworth
The Renaissance
Picaresque
Epic
26. A work written to mourn the death and memorialize the life of someone who died
Elegy
roman a clef
Daniel Defoe
Jane Austen
27. An important critical movement that took hold in the early decades of the twentieth century. It stresses the importance of paying close attention to the literary text as a way to develop critical intelligence
Medieval Period
Samuel Johnson
Hyperbole
New Criticism
28. A characteristic of art or nature that inspires a feeling of grander and mystery. For example: an ancient ruins - a storm swept landscape - of the fall of Satan in Milton's Paradise Lost.
Dramatic Monologue
Cycle
Sublime
Chiasmus
29. Unrhymed verse; esp. - unrhymed verse having five iambic feet per line - as in Elizabethan drama
Chivalry
Victorian Period
blank verse
roman a clef
30. Augustan Period; Robinson Crusoe - Moll Flanders
Free verse
Enjambment
Daniel Defoe
Trace
31. Poetry that has no fixed meter - although it has rhythmic lines and line breaks and is therefore presumably composed with rhythmic qualities in mind. It came into vogue during the modern period.
Tetralogy
Free verse
Dramatic Irony
Elegy
32. A figure of speech in which an implicit comparison is made between two unlike things that actually have something in common Ex: Her home was a prison.
New Criticism
The Renaissance
Metaphor
Ideology
33. (1670-1790) identified literature as a worthy cultural pursuit capable of reconciling respect for classical learning with the evolving interests and tastes of the educated middle class. Translated - imitated - and elucidated the most respectable anci
Augustan Period
Enjambment
Picaresque
The Renaissance
34. To put or publish. Published novel
Serialized Novels
Epistles
Allegory
Medieval Period
35. The 1623 collection of William Shakespeare's plays published after his death by member of his acting company
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
First Folio
Dramatic Irony
Ideology
36. A literary - usually verse composition in which a speaker reveals his or her character - often in relation to a critical situation or event - in a monologue addressed to the reader or to a presumed listener.
New Criticism
Essay
Condition of England novel
Dramatic Monologue
37. Written in the form of a series of letters exchanged by the characters - as certain novels of the 18th cent.
Chiasmus
Epistolary Novels
Gothic novels
William Shakespeare
38. The contrast - as in a play - between what a character thinks the truth is - as revealed in a speech or action - and what an audience or reader knows the truth
Dramatic Irony
First Folio
Imagery
Wilfred Owen
39. A figure of speech in which one thing is likened to another - dissimilar thing by the use of like - as - etc. (Ex.: a heart as big as a whale - her tears flowed like wine)
Simile
Cycle
Abstraction
Ode
40. The mood or emotional attitude evoked or reflected in a written work
blank verse
Antistrophe
Metaphysical poetry
Tone
41. The semblance of truth - a quality that helps distinguish the early novel from fable and romance
Marginalization
Verisimilitude
Aporia
Neo-Platonism
42. One of the three sections of the Greek dramatic chorus and the Pindaric ode - along with the antistrophe and epode. These forms may be repeated in sequence within a single ode.
roman a clef
Rhyming Couplet
Condition of England novel
Strophe
43. A sentence that changes its grammatical structure in the middle - often suggest disturbance or excitement. For example: 'we had almost reached the finished line and then the race had to have been fixed from the beginning'
Anacoluthon
The Renaissance
Trace
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
44. The narrative technique of shifting freely between a first-person and an interior third-person point of view
Irony
Bidungsroman
Canon
Free indirect discourse
45. Modern Period; 'Dulce et Decorum Est'
Epic Simile
Sensation
Wilfred Owen
Stream-of-consciousness
46. A verbal pattern in two parts in which the second part is like a mirror image of the first.
Panegyric
Tetralogy
Anadiplosis
Chiasmus
47. Poetry characterized by elaborate - sometimes bizarre use of metaphor; rough - rugged versification; dramatic speakers; and paradoxical reasoning.
Tone
Tetralogy
blank verse
Metaphysical poetry
48. A verse form of Italian origin - made up of tercets - the second line of each tercet rhyming with the first and third lines of the next one (aba - bcb - cdc - etc.)
Samuel Johnson
terza rima
Foreshadow
Aubade
49. The dramatic genre of the 1950s that enacts the idea of existential meaninglessness
John Milton
Vignette
Theater of the absurd
Abstraction
50. Repetition at the start of a sentence of the concluding word or phrase in the previous sentence. For example: 'There's only so much exercise you can get on a plane. A air plane is not the greatest place to work out'
Anadiplosis
Eclogues
Imagery
Enjambment