SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. The secondary significance a word acquires through association that goes beyond its literal meaning
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Beowulf
Aporia
Connotation
2. A movement that took place near the end of the nineteenth century that aimed to free art from conventional Victorian morality
Epic Simile
Medieval Period
Serialized Novels
Aestheticism
3. In deconstruction - things that are absent from yet suggested by a text. A trace may be the opposite of a written word
Assonance
Trace
Augustan Period
Iambic pentameter
4. A speech conventionally understood to convey the private thought of the character who delivers it
Aporia
Soliloquy
terza rima
Victorian Period
5. Augustan Period
Wilfred Owen
Samuel Johnson
Irony
Epistolary novel
6. A poem praising someone for their achievements - stemming from ancient Greece
blank verse
Personification
New Criticism
Panegyric
7. Focus on the lives of the rich and elegant
Aestheticism
Wilfred Owen
Fashionable novel
Syllepsis
8. 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
Verisimilitude
Samuel Johnson
Canon
Picaresque
9. Unrhymed verse; esp. - unrhymed verse having five iambic feet per line - as in Elizabethan drama
Medieval Period
blank verse
Chivalry
Verisimilitude
10. Is the idealized code of medieval nobility. It stressed honesty and integrity in living up to one's social obligations - courtesy to others - and deference to ladies.
Sublime
Rhyme scheme
Chivalry
Condition of England novel
11. A repeated pattern of lines and rhymes analogous to a verse in a song
Stanza
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Christopher Marlowe
Rhyming Couplet
12. Renaissance Period ; Paradise Lost
Stream-of-consciousness
Soliloquy
Romantic Period
John Milton
13. 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.
Romantic Period
Strophe
Ode
Dramatic Monologue
14. The repetition of consonant sounds close to each other
John Milton
Vignette
Alliteration
Strophe
15. 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.
Sublime
Chiasmus
Allegory
Syllepsis
16. 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.
Iambic pentameter
Dramatic Monologue
Romantic Period
Simile
17. The repetition of vowel sounds close to each other
Romantic Period
Assonance
Medieval Period
New Criticism
18. 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
New Criticism
Tone
Stream-of-consciousness
Aubade
19. The narrative technique of shifting freely between a first-person and an interior third-person point of view
Meter
Ode
New Criticism
Free indirect discourse
20. Any tangible thing named in a language - regardless of whether that thing is literal or figurative
Dramatic Irony
Vignette
Tone
Imagery
21. A term used in deconstruction - absence of meaning and multiplicity of possible meaning within a text
Aporia
Augustan Period
William Wordsworth
Trace
22. 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
Gothic novels
Ideology
Chiasmus
Trace
23. Letters - usually formal
Epistles
heroic couple
Aubade
roman a clef
24. A method of humorous or subtly sarcastic expression in which the intended meaning of the words is the direct opposite of their usual sense: the irony of calling a stupid plan 'clever'
Beowulf
Iambic pentameter
Fashionable novel
Irony
25. 12th-15th Centuries. Promoted chivalric (knightly) ideals that helped stabilize a social hierarchy based on bloodlines
Medieval Period
Stream-of-consciousness
First Folio
Villanelle
26. An extended metaphor used in a drama or narrative
Aporia
Allegory
First Folio
Aestheticism
27. A lyric from stemming from the Middle Ages that treats the subject of two lovers waking up together. It may deal with the joy of being together or with the sorrow of having to part.
Condition of England novel
Epode
Aubade
Alliteration
28. Augustan Period;
Panegyric
Alexander Pope
William Shakespeare
Epistolary novel
29. A group of four works
Tetralogy
Canon
Metaphor
Alliteration
30. A prose form originated by the French Renaissance humanist Michel de Montaigne as an experimental and skeptical approach to writing
Tetralogy
Essay
Gothic novels
Epistles
31. The dramatic genre of the 1950s that enacts the idea of existential meaninglessness
Christopher Marlowe
Aestheticism
Theater of the absurd
Gothic novels
32. A work written to mourn the death and memorialize the life of someone who died
Elegy
Panegyric
First Folio
blank verse
33. A long - blustering - noisy - or scolding speech; tirade
Aestheticism
Anadiplosis
Connotation
Harangue
34. 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'
Villanelle
Anadiplosis
Foreshadow
Metaphysical poetry
35. The process of denying or disguising political values by misrepresenting them as natural - universal - or transcendent ideals.
First Folio
Sensation
Anadiplosis
Mystification
36. (1790-1840) poets turned inward for the inspiration to celebrate the powers of nature and the creative spirit of individualism
Tone
Marginalization
Neo-Platonism
Romantic Period
37. A short - carefully constructed scene in a film - play - etc.; specif. - one regarded as subtle - sensitive - etc
New Criticism
Eclogues
Charles Dickens
Vignette
38. The use of a single word in two different senses at once. For example: I just quit smoking and my job.
William Shakespeare
Epic Simile
Assonance
Syllepsis
39. Novel a melodramatic novel devoted to scandalous doings - guilty secrets - and lurid intrigues
Stanza
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Harangue
Sensation
40. 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
Syllepsis
Essay
terza rima
41. A couplet is a pair of lines of verse. It usually consists of two lines that rhyme and have the same meter. While traditionally couplets rhyme - not all do
Free indirect discourse
Rhyming Couplet
Tone
New Criticism
42. 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.
Epode
New Criticism
Daniel Defoe
Connotation
43. 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
Epic
Aubade
Mystification
Cycle
44. 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.
Mystery plays
Gothic novels
Verisimilitude
Metaphor
45. A novel concerned with the negative social and economic impacts of industrialism
The Renaissance
Condition of England novel
Connotation
Augustan Period
46. 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
First Folio
Simile
Marginalization
heroic couple
47. The semblance of truth - a quality that helps distinguish the early novel from fable and romance
Anadiplosis
Verisimilitude
Tetralogy
Chivalry
48. To put or publish. Published novel
Sublime
Harangue
Serialized Novels
Marginalization
49. Novel a modernist form that puts a story together by tracing the thoughts and feelings of its characters rather than through the voice of a detached narrator
Tone
Theater of the absurd
Stream-of-consciousness
Trace
50. 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
Ideology
Serialized Novels
Metaphor
Beowulf