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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 story written in certain form or rhyme and rhythm with imagery
Place adverbs
Prepositional phrase
Poetry
Analogy
2. Characters or events trigger the central conflict
Type of Lit: Novel
Plot
non - fiction
Plot: Inciting force
3. Smallest meaningful unit of speech - which can no longer be divided. (Ex. in - come - on).
Compound sentences
Future tense
morpheme
Epic
4. Follows a linking verb and describes the subject.
Type of Lit: Comedy
Schema
Predicate adjective
Irregular adjective
5. Includes the time - place(s) - physical details - and the circumstances or events in which a situation occurs.
Imagery
Setting
homophone
Foreshadow
6. A group of words with a special - more figurative meaning instead of the literal meaning. (Ex. Charlie planned a presentation on water resources - but jack stole his thunder when he told the boss it was his idea.)
Idiom
Literary Selections: Narrative
Manner adverbs
Developing
7. The conclusion of the story and the completion of all the action.
Superlative adjective
Plural pronouns
Plot: Resolution
Regular verbs
8. Singles out a specific noun; this that - these - those (a noun must immediately follow).
Symbol
Demonstrative adjective
Tone
non - fiction
9. A device in which a word or phrase is used to mean the exact opposite of its normal meaning. Can also be used to show that a person - situation - statement - or circumstance is not as it usually appears.
Inferences
Irony
Manner adverbs
Interrogative
10. Distinct unit of sound found within language that helps distinguish utterances from one another.
Plot: Falling action
digraph
phoneme
Type of Lit: Essay
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.
Verbal Irony
Communication: Encounters
Figurative Language
Two - syllable adjective
12. The writer tells the story another character addressing him as 'you'. It appears to the readers as if they are the characters being told what to do and what to feel.
Indirect presentation
Type of Lit: Myth
Second Person
Communication: Rituals
13. 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.
Flashback
First Person
phoneme
Paraphrase
14. Requires the words more/most of less/least to express comparison.
Exaggeration
Imagery
Initial
Three (or more) syllable adjective
15. A literary work that is in ordinary form and used the familiar structure of spoken language - sentence after sentence.
Imagery
Communication: Rituals
Type of Lit: Prose
Literary Selections: Expository
16. A simple short story that is used to explain a brief - a moral - or a spiritual lesson
Past tense
dipthong
Hyperbole
Type of Lit: Parable
17. Is formed by a proper noun and is always capitalized.
Verb
Dramatic monologue
Proper adjective
Theme
18. The main idea or the fundamental meaning of literary work that can be either plainly stated or implied.
Theme
Mood
Type of Lit: Myth
Exclamatory
19. About the author's own personal life (written by the author)
Type of Lit: Comedy
Comparative adverbs
Literary Selections: Expository
Autobiography
20. A figure of speech used as a comparison of two unrelated objects - concepts - or ideas without using the words like or as. (Ex. The girl was a hog when it came to ice cream.)
Plot: Types of Conflict
First Person
Metaphor
Adjective
21. Is a scheme of how words are organized into patterns
Rhyme
Figurative Language
Foreshadow
Plot: Types of Conflict
22. Connection occurs when students can relate their own lives or make very personal connections to what is currently being read.
Text - to - self (T- S)
Exclamatory
Analogy
Communication: Crisis
23. These communications occur as part of a tradition - or established meeting or time when certain groups come together for discussions or in response to activities.
Idiom
Analogy
Type of Lit: Novel
Communication: Rituals
24. A story written for the purpose of performance
Play
Communication
Mystery
Indirect presentation
25. The background knowledge or experiences that students may bring with them into the reading of a text.
Schema
Type of Lit: Drama
Exclamatory
Folktales
26. Is a word that names a person - place - thing - concept - idea - act - or characteristic. Nouns give names to everything that exists - has existed - or will exist in the world.
homophone
Noun
Dialogue
Communication: Crisis
27. Have their own - individual form for each tense - which does not follow a pattern.
Text - to - text (T- T)
Irregular verbs
Text - to - self (T- S)
Type of Lit: Myth
28. A writing in which the reality of life is shown.
Flashback
Superlative adjective
Predicate adjective
Type of Lit: Realism
29. The use of a recurring object - element - concept - word - phrase - or structure in order to draw the readers' attention to a specific point the author is trying to make.
Comparative adverbs
Plural pronouns
Motif
Possessive Pronoun
30. The outcome of the conflict can be forecasted. This is the peak of the story and often included the greatest emotion.
Type of Lit: Drama
Plural pronouns
Plot: Exposition
Plot: Climax
31. Main problem in the story.
Place adverbs
Superlative adverbs
Type of Lit: Comedy
Plot: Conflict
32. A string of events that builds up from the conflict - when then moves toward the climax.
Type of Lit: Parable
Theme
Plot: Rising Action
homonym
33. The use of conversation between characters in order to provide readers with insight in the characters' behaviors - motivations - and human interactions.
Analogy
Developing
Two - syllable adjective
Dialogue
34. A word the joins together words or groups of words.
Foreshadow
Conjunction
Indirect presentation
Type of Lit: Tragedy
35. When a conjunction joins a word to a word - a phrase to a phrase - or a clause to a clause; the words or phrases or clauses joined must be equal or of the same type.
Prepositional phrase
Pronoun
Conjunction: Coordinating
Adjective
36. A sentence that asks a question and ends with a question mark.
Foreshadow
Analogy
Interrogative
Communication: Deviants
37. Is a word or phrase used to show strong emotion or surprise. (Ex. Hey!; Oh no - a shark!)
Interjection
morpheme
Inferences
Text - to - text (T- T)
38. A story with an imaginary setting - plot - and characters - some of whom may have special powers
Fantasy
Physical Point of View
Verbal Irony
Interjection
39. Compares 3 or more people - places - things - ideas - concepts - or characteristics. The adjective usually ends in - est.
Superlative adjective
affix
dipthong
Exaggeration
40. Introduction of the story. Reader is introduced to the setting - tone - characters - purpose if the story
Irony
Oxymoron
Interrogative
Plot: Exposition
41. Statements or ideas that are able to be verified and supported with evidence.
Third Person
Type of Lit: Comedy
Fact
Text - to - world (T- W
42. When the pronoun is used as the sentence's subject.
Declarative
Prepositional phrase
Subject Pronoun
Positive adjective
43. The overstatement or the stretching of the truth in order to emphasize a point. (Ex. The music was so loud it shattered my eardrums.)
Rhyme
Opinion
Science fiction
Exaggeration
44. When the audience perceives something that a character in the literature does not know.
Regular verbs
Adverb
Object Pronoun
Dramatic Irony
45. Contains the preposition - the object of the preposition and the modifiers of the object.
Type of Lit: Realism
Realistic fiction
Direct presentation
Prepositional phrase
46. A sentence that gives a command - often with you are the understood subject - and ends with a period.
Regular verbs
Imperative
Epic
Folktales
47. An exaggeration or use of a statement that enhances the effects of the words - which may or may not be realistic. (Ex. It was such a hot summer that even the cactus was sweating.)
Hyperbole
Type of Lit: Short Story
Degree adverbs
Communication: Deviants
48. Is a word the modifies a verb - an adjective - or an adverb. Adverbs tell how - when - where - why - how much - and how often.
Communication: Deviants
Article
Adverb
Motif
49. Is the perspective from which a story is told or a literary piece is written.
First Person
Point of View
Object Pronoun
Comparative adverbs
50. A comparison of two unrelated objects - concepts - or ideas through the use of the words like or as. (Ex. My words trickled off my tongue like raindrops on a windshield.)
Play
Predicate adjective
Irony
Simile