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Test your basic knowledge |
Praxis 2 English Literature
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
praxis
,
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. Wrote To Kill a Mockingbird - which won a Pulitzer Prize
Jane Austen
free verse
persuasive
Harper Lee
2. Methods a writer uses to develop characters
interrogative sentence
common noun
Characterization
compound sentence
3. Originated in late 18th century when poets wrote about nature and beauty - They contrasted the beauty of naure to the harsh reality of the world and cities after the Industrial Revolution - William Wordsworth - William Blake - Percy Bysshe Shelly - J
appositive
British Romantics
Ray Bradbury
Building Metacognition
4. Explanatory; serving to explain; N. exposition: explaining; exhibition
Willa Cather
compare and contrast
common noun
expository
5. A sentence having no coordinate clauses or subordinate clauses
Andrew Marvell
simple sentence
compound complex sentence
line graph
6. A traditional story presenting supernatural characters and episodes that help explain natural events
limerick
persuasive
myth
John Keats
7. A reference to a well - known person - place - event - literary work - or work of art
passive verb
paradox
Harper Lee
Allusion
8. The use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later in a plot
Ray Bradbury
Emily Dickinson
Jane Austen
Foreshadowing
9. Attempts to affect the listener's personal feelings
pie chart
appeal to emotion
limerick
elegy
10. names a particular person - place - thing or idea
noun
collective noun
proper noun
Modeling
11. A short moral story (often with animal characters)
metonymy
Edgar Allan Poe
fable
collective noun
12. something visible that by association or convention represents something else that is invisible
future perfect verb
Stephen Crane
bar graph
symbol
13. The word - phrase - or clause to which a pronoun refers - understood by the context.
myth
Antecedent
Countee Cullen
science fiction
14. Wrote 'On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer -' 'To Autumn -' and 'Bright Star - Would I Were Stedfast As Thou Art;' English poet in Romantic movement during early 19th century; motifs include departures and reveries - the five sense and art - and th
J. D. Salinger
noun
tone
John Keats
15. If the subject is plural the verb has to plural also and vis - versa
Dialect
common noun
Subject Verb Agreement
pronoun
16. The subjects recieves the action rather than does the action; not as strong as an active verb
short story
passive verb
exclamatory sentence
John Keats
17. Wrote The Joy Luck Club (widely hailed for its depiction of the Chinese - American experience of the late 20th century)
synecdoche
persuasive
Imagery
Amy Tan
18. A noun that is singular in form but refers to a group of people or things
Analogy
Andrew Marvell
independent clause
collective noun
19. Modernism -- The Great Gatsby; Winter Dreams; wrote during the jazz age
line graph
verb
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Henry David Thoreau
20. A verb that tells that something is happening now.
collective noun
symbolism
present tense verb
Questioning
21. A clause in a complex sentence that cannot stand alone as a complete sentence and that functions within the sentence as a noun or adjective or adverb
dependent clause
Cliche
hyperbole
John Keats
22. Two consecutive rhyming lines
spatial sequence
Simile
Irony
couplet
23. A verb tense that disucsses the future in a past tense : ie 'I will have sung'
future perfect verb
elegy
present perfect verb
common noun
24. questions to reinforce concepts and elicit analysis - synthesis - or evaluation
Questioning
fairy tale
prepositional phrase
Mary Shelley
25. spatial - geometrical - or geographical arrangement of ideas according to their position in space (examples: left/right - top/bottom - circular - adjacent)
novel
spatial sequence
passive verb
Metaphysical poets
26. American transcendentalist who was against a government that supported slavery. He wrote down his beliefs in Walden. He started the movement of civil - disobedience when he refused to pay the toll - tax to support him Mexican War; wrote 'Walden'
adverb
dependent clause
Stephen Crane
Henry David Thoreau
27. Fiction dealing with the solution of a crime or the unraveling of secrets
compound sentence
mystery
Ralph Waldo Emerson
symbolism
28. An English writer - poet - philologist - and university professor - best known as the author of the classic high fantasy works The Hobbit - The Lord of the Rings - and The Silmarillion
creative
point of view
Henry David Thoreau
J.R.R. Tolkein
29. Unrhymed verse without a consistent metrical pattern
symbol
free verse
Transcendentalism
elegy
30. A form of a verb that generally appears with the word 'to' and acts as a noun - adjective - or adverb; the uninflected form of the verb
dependent clause
infinitive
past perfect verb
fable
31. Wrote The Color Purple; American author - self - declared feminist and womanist; won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
historical fiction
Alice Walker
appeal to authority
George Herbert
32. A following of one thing after another in time
chronological sequence
Stephen Crane
setting
George Herbert
33. A sentence missing a subject or verb or complete thought
sentence fragment
dependent clause
Participle
mystery
34. A literary work in which characters - objects - or actions represent abstractions
proper noun
cause and effect
allegory
Activating Prior Knowledge
35. A sad or mournful poem
Ray Bradbury
participial
Epic
elegy
36. A figure of speech that expresses a resemblance between things of different kinds (usually formed with 'like' or 'as')
Epic
spatial sequence
Simile
John Keats
37. United States poet famous for his lyrical poems on country life in New England (1874-1963); 'The Road Not Taken' 'Fire and Ice' 'Nothing Gold Can Stay'
Epic
point of view
symbol
Robert Frost
38. A tale circulated by word of mouth among the common folk; story told by common people used mainly to entertain
folk tale
George Orwell
past perfect verb
dependent clause
39. A relationship in which change in one variable causes change in another
cause and effect
Andrew Marvell
free verse
Irony
40. A sentence expressing strong feeling - usually punctuated with an exclamation mark
personification
J.R.R. Tolkein
Diction
exclamatory sentence
41. Where and when the story takes place (established through description of scenes - colors - smellls - etc)
setting
independent clause
Alliteration
Cliche
42. Wrote 'Any Human to Another -' 'Color -' and 'The Ballad of the Brown Girl;' American Romantic poet; leading African - American poets of his time; associated with generation of poets of the Harlem Renaissance
Countee Cullen
Mark Twain
style
Harper Lee
43. The choices a writer makes; the combination of distinctive features of a literary work
homophone
J.R.R. Tolkein
style
apostrophe
44. A period in the 1920s when African - American achievements in art and music and literature flourished
myth
appositive
tone
harlem renaissance
45. English Metaphysical poet; Wrote 'To his Coy Mistress'
style
Irony
Andrew Marvell
verb
46. Wrote The Diary of a Young Girl (autobiographical literature set between 1942-1944) 1st published in 1952 - chronicles her life in Nazi Germany
Anne Frank
Antecedent
extended metaphor
appositive
47. Wrote 'On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer -' 'To Autumn -' and 'Bright Star - Would I Were Stedfast As Thou Art;' English poet in Romantic movement during early 19th century; motifs include departures and reveries - the five sense and art - and th
Participle
John Keats
noun
harlem renaissance
48. Original and imaginative
creative
past tense verb
mystery
Scaffolding
49. Expresses action or state of being
Building Metacognition
present tense verb
past perfect verb
verb
50. The perspective from which the story is told (first - person - third - person objective - third - person omniscient - etc)
Henry David Thoreau
collective noun
point of view
simple sentence