SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. Express one person - place - thing - concept - idea - or characteristics.
homonym
Complex sentences
Singular pronouns
Future tense
2. The conclusion of the story and the completion of all the action.
Adverb
Plot: Resolution
Play
Irregular adjective
3. Have 1 independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.
Onomatopoeia
Figurative Language
Complex sentences
Type of Lit: Essay
4. Follows a linking verb and describes the subject.
Direct presentation
Predicate adjective
Imagery
Type of Lit: Tragedy
5. 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.
Third Person
Object Pronoun
Plot: Conflict
Realistic fiction
6. Not true - imaginary - books that are not true stories - but made up ones.
Type of Lit: Essay
fiction
Fact
affix
7. Introduction of the story. Reader is introduced to the setting - tone - characters - purpose if the story
Plot: Exposition
Type of Lit: Drama
Plot: Inciting force
Comparative adjective
8. Includes the time - place(s) - physical details - and the circumstances or events in which a situation occurs.
Superlative adverbs
homophone
Setting
Type of Lit: Short Story
9. Shows comparison by the suffixes (er/est) or modifiers (more/most).
Foreshadow
Plot
Decoding Skills
Two - syllable adjective
10. A narrative poem about historical or legendary creatures
Epic
Plot: Conflict
Plot
Poetry
11. (extending stage) Reader delves into the text - using background knowledge to build an understanding of the literary piece with new information being absorbed and used to ask questions.
Metaphor
fiction
Degree adverbs
Developing
12. Occur when the adverbs tells where - to where - or from where.
Place adverbs
Irregular verbs
Text - to - world (T- W
Singular pronouns
13. Comparison of similar objects - which suggests that since the objects are similar in some ways they will probably be alike in other ways.
Positive adjective
Fact
Dialogue
Analogy
14. 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.
Text - to - text (T- T)
Motif
Type of Lit: Myth
Fantasy
15. A string of events that builds up from the conflict - when then moves toward the climax.
Pace
Plot: Rising Action
Object Pronoun
Rhyme
16. Is a scheme of how words are organized into patterns
Foreshadow
Rhyme
Mystery
Type of Lit: Fable
17. Life is dealt with in a humorous manner - often poking fun at people's mistakes.
Type of Lit: Comedy
Conjunction: Coordinating
Direct presentation
Science fiction
18. The use of conversation between characters in order to provide readers with insight in the characters' behaviors - motivations - and human interactions.
Dialogue
Two - syllable adjective
Third Person
Realistic fiction
19. 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.
Imagery
Type of Lit: Comedy
Second Person
Dialogue
20. Is the process of understanding that letters in text represent the sounds (phonemes) in speech.
Communication: Crisis
Singular pronouns
Decoding Skills
Critical Analysis
21. Reference or resource works - textbooks - and informational materials most often used in subject or content areas.
Plot
Past tense
Foreshadow
Literary Selections: Expository
22. Writing in which the information is presented as fact or as truth.
Type of Lit: Essay
non - fiction
Autobiography
Decoding Skills
23. Describes a noun or pronoun without comparing it to anyone or anything else.
Communication
Situational Irony
Positive adjective
dipthong
24. 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.
Fantasy
Conjunction: Subordinating
Pronoun
First Person
25. Focuses on a mix of reality and the imaginary.
Science fiction
Motif
Type of Lit: Tragedy
Literary Selections: Narrative
26. (extension of reading stage) Reader used text knowledge to connect to personal knowledge of the reader's life - the lives of others - and the human condition.
Mood
Personification
affix
Reflection/response
27. Is any adjective that is not proper and in not capitalized.
Common adjective
Comparative adjective
Dialogue
affix
28. Tales that relate to the unknown and revealed through human or worldly dilemmas or situations that include horror - fantasy - crime - solving - secret events - and the supernatural.
Inferences
Conjunction: Subordinating
Situational Irony
Mystery
29. The setting - time - event - and characters are based on history and facts.
Type of Lit: Essay
Historical Fiction
Verb
non - fiction
30. When the pronoun is the object of a verb or prepositional phrase.
Object Pronoun
Mystery
Plot: Climax
Three (or more) syllable adjective
31. A writing in which the reality of life is shown.
Verb
Type of Lit: Realism
Adjective
Compound sentences
32. 1. Man vs. Man - One person is against another.2. Man vs. Nature - A person(s) battles with forces of nature.3. Man vs. Society - Societal values (customs) are challenged by person(s).4. Man vs. Self - Internal struggles - or test of values of a char
Degree adverbs
fiction
Realistic fiction
Plot: Types of Conflict
33. When the pronoun shows ownership or possession.
Communication: Crisis
Possessive Pronoun
Idiom
affix
34. Is the sequential order of events within a narrative
Direct presentation
Second Person
Plot
Verb
35. Is formed by a proper noun and is always capitalized.
Manner adverbs
Communication: Encounters
Dramatic Irony
Proper adjective
36. A literary work that is in ordinary form and used the familiar structure of spoken language - sentence after sentence.
Type of Lit: Prose
Possessive Pronoun
Communication: Deviants
Compound - complex sentences
37. The sense of feeling(s) in literary works. How the author presents or selects the setting - images - objects - and words in a story.
Noun
Epic
Mood
Verbal Irony
38. Attachment to a base or root word.
Prepositional phrase
affix
Superlative adverbs
Predicate adjective
39. About the author's own personal life (written by the author)
Pace
Noun
Fantasy
Autobiography
40. Is the perspective from which a story is told or a literary piece is written.
Compound - complex sentences
Point of View
Folktales
Text - to - text (T- T)
41. Compares 2 or more people - places - things - ideas - concepts - or characteristics. The event usually ends in - er.
Plot: Exposition
Comparative adjective
Text - to - text (T- T)
Subject Pronoun
42. A short story - often with animals as the main characters - that teachers a moral or lesson to the reader
Type of Lit: Fable
Opinion
Future tense
Adjective
43. Is a word placed before a noun - which introduces the noun as specific (the) or nonspecific (a - an).
Point of View
Article
Oxymoron
Biography
44. A story written in certain form or rhyme and rhythm with imagery
Personal Point of View
Type of Lit: Drama
Poetry
Noun
45. A narrative that can be read in one sitting. Has few characters and often one conflict. Characters go through some type of change by the end of the story.
Second Person
Personification
Adverb
Type of Lit: Short Story
46. Requires the words more/most of less/least to express comparison.
Folktales
First Person
Simile
Three (or more) syllable adjective
47. Words that are spelled differently - pronounced identically - but have different meanings. (Ex. two - too - to; isle - aisle; ball - bawl; sweet - suite; here - hear; pair - pear; pain - pane).
homophone
Irony
Time adverbs
Analogy
48. Main problem in the story.
Metaphor
Compound sentences
homonym
Plot: Conflict
49. A character's traits are exposed by actions and speech.
Indirect presentation
Object Pronoun
Three (or more) syllable adjective
Flashback
50. A speech or poem spoken by one character in order to share their innermost thought and feelings - which have been hidden throughout the story
non - fiction
Irregular verbs
Paraphrase
Dramatic monologue