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Test your basic knowledge |
Praxis 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. A narrative is a constructive format (as a work of speech - writing - song - film - television - video games - photography or theatre) that describes a sequence of non - fictional or fictional events.
Dramatic Irony
Communication: Rituals
Literary Selections: Narrative
Direct presentation
2. When the audience perceives something that a character in the literature does not know.
Dramatic Irony
Communication
Plot: Falling action
Communication: Deviants
3. A sentence that asks a question and ends with a question mark.
Plot: Falling action
Comparative adjective
Exaggeration
Interrogative
4. Is the perspective from which a story is told or a literary piece is written.
Point of View
Realistic fiction
Positive adverbs
Type of Lit: Essay
5. The outcome of the conflict can be forecasted. This is the peak of the story and often included the greatest emotion.
Type of Lit: Tragedy
Plot: Types of Conflict
Plot: Climax
Time adverbs
6. A hint of clue that the author provides to the reader to suggest what will happen next of at sometime in the future in the story or narrative.
Foreshadow
Second Person
Folktales
Autobiography
7. A story with an imaginary setting - plot - and characters - some of whom may have special powers
Subject Pronoun
Situational Irony
Interrogative
Fantasy
8. Occur when the adverb tells how much or how little.
Compound - complex sentences
Hyperbole
Interjection
Degree adverbs
9. A letter or letters that represent one phoneme; the smallest meaningful unit within a writing system. (Ex. cat=/c/ /a/ /t/
Inferences
Paraphrase
Motif
grapheme
10. A simple short story that is used to explain a brief - a moral - or a spiritual lesson
Type of Lit: Parable
Developing
Dramatic monologue
Plural pronouns
11. Daily communications that happen as people interact with one another in their common environment. These relations may occur in the home - at work - in school - in the community - or on the computer.
Communication: Encounters
Paraphrase
Pronoun
Epic
12. Is the sequential order of events within a narrative
Predicate adjective
Two - syllable adjective
Dramatic monologue
Plot
13. A play that uses dialogue to present its message to the audience and it meant to be performed.
Communication
Type of Lit: Drama
Schema
homonym
14. Shows the action happened in the past or before (uses 'ed')
Noun
Past tense
Positive adverbs
Literary elements
15. Writing in which the information is presented as fact or as truth.
Plot: Types of Conflict
Tone
non - fiction
Oxymoron
16. 2 vowels in which the sound begins at the first vowel and moves toward the sound of the second vowel. (Ex. snout=ou - boy=oy)
Verb
Second Person
dipthong
Plot: Rising Action
17. Is a discrepancy between the expected results and actual results.
Onomatopoeia
Type of Lit: Realism
Personal Point of View
Situational Irony
18. A story that was created to explain some natural force of nature - religious belief - or social phenomenon. The gods and goddesses have supernatural powers but the human characters often do not.
Plot: Types of Conflict
Hyperbole
Type of Lit: Myth
Manner adverbs
19. A narrative poem about historical or legendary creatures
Inferences
Epic
Symbol
Superlative adjective
20. Main problem in the story.
Type of Lit: Drama
Plot: Conflict
Indirect presentation
Symbol
21. The sense of feeling(s) in literary works. How the author presents or selects the setting - images - objects - and words in a story.
Type of Lit: Short Story
Verbal Irony
Mood
Idiom
22. A writing in which the reality of life is shown.
Compound - complex sentences
Type of Lit: Realism
Communication
Adverb
23. Occur when the adverbs tells where - to where - or from where.
Mood
Article
Motif
Place adverbs
24. Is a specific use of language that appeals to the readers' senses. Act of forming mental pictures by the reader and to form these pictures while reading.
Historical Fiction
Imagery
First Person
Declarative
25. Combination of 2 letters possessing a single sound (Ex. head=ea - chance=ch - path=th)
digraph
Place adverbs
Present tense
Singular pronouns
26. The ability to impart and share knowledge - opinions - ideas - feelings - and beliefs.
Pronoun
Inferences
Communication
Predicate adjective
27. Refer to the specific and recognizable characteristics of the text of literary work
Literary elements
Plot
Irregular verbs
Imperative
28. A literary work in which there is a downfall of the hero due to a tragic flaw or personal characteristic: often ends with an unhappy ending.
Type of Lit: Tragedy
Text - to - text (T- T)
grapheme
phoneme
29. Follow a distinct pattern and are predictable
Two - syllable adjective
Type of Lit: Drama
Regular verbs
Singular pronouns
30. The device in which an author interrupts the story or narrative to go back and explain an earlier event or recall an earlier memory of a character.
Type of Lit: Realism
Time adverbs
Flashback
Two - syllable adjective
31. Gives the reader approximate information and does not tell exactly how much or how many.
Third Person
Manner adverbs
Two - syllable adjective
Indefinite adjective
32. The conclusion of the story and the completion of all the action.
Type of Lit: Tragedy
Plot: Climax
Irony
Plot: Resolution
33. A story written for the purpose of performance
Compound adjective
Preposition
Play
Compound sentences
34. Reference or resource works - textbooks - and informational materials most often used in subject or content areas.
Type of Lit: Fable
Literary Selections: Expository
Interjection
Fantasy
35. The author takes the point of view of a character providing personal thoughts or feelings and shares what other characters do and say. This is the 'I' narrative.
Foreshadow
Conjunction
Manner adverbs
First Person
36. Societies must deal with people who are considered misfits - as they stray from societal norms and laws.
Mood
Foreshadow
Type of Lit: Drama
Communication: Deviants
37. Attachment to a base or root word.
affix
Conjunction: Coordinating
Plot: Falling action
Communication: Deviants
38. A non - fiction piece that is often short and used to express the writer's opinion about a topic or to share information on a subject.
Predicate adjective
Analogy
Type of Lit: Essay
Possessive Pronoun
39. A string of events that builds up from the conflict - when then moves toward the climax.
Fact
Plot: Rising Action
Theme
non - fiction
40. Not true - imaginary - books that are not true stories - but made up ones.
Plot: Resolution
Irregular adjective
fiction
Imagery
41. Replace nouns in a sentence.
Rhyme
Personal pronouns
Third Person
Conjunction: Subordinating
42. The author tells the story from an outside voice. The narrator is not one of the characters in the story but informs the reader about the characters.
Indefinite adjective
Third Person
Degree adverbs
Physical Point of View
43. Is the process of understanding that letters in text represent the sounds (phonemes) in speech.
Type of Lit: Essay
Decoding Skills
Initial
Manner adverbs
44. A literary work that is in ordinary form and used the familiar structure of spoken language - sentence after sentence.
Irony
Type of Lit: Prose
Mood
Communication: Crisis
45. The use of words that are appealing to the sense of hearing and mimic sounds that aid in the description for the reader. (Ex. boom - sizzle - tinkle - hiss - chiming - tolling - moan - groan - purr - squeak)
Complex sentences
Personification
Onomatopoeia
Realistic fiction
46. Refers to the position in time and space in which an author describes his or her views or material.
Initial
Pronoun
Physical Point of View
Interrogative
47. Connections are on a larger - broader scale - and this happens when students are able to relay what occurs in a literary work to what ensues in the world.
Reflection/response
Text - to - world (T- W
Indefinite adjective
Alliteration
48. Express one person - place - thing - concept - idea - or characteristics.
Singular pronouns
homophone
First Person
Text - to - text (T- T)
49. Is a word used in place of or to replace a noun. Pronouns include: I - me - myself - you - yours - yourself - we - us - ours - he - she - his - her - hers - they - their - theirs - it - its.
Plot
Noun
Pronoun
Flashback
50. Possess 2 or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses.
Type of Lit: Comedy
Text - to - world (T- W
Compound - complex sentences
Type of Lit: Tragedy