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Test your basic knowledge |
Praxis Middle School Language Arts
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
praxis
,
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. A metric line of poetry. Its name is based on the kind and number of feet composing it ('foot').
Couplet
Verse
Refrain
verbal irony
2. A word that connects other words or groups of words. Ex. In the sentence Bob and Dan are friends - the _____ 'and' connects two nouns and in the sentence.
Euphemism
Archaic (diction)
Clause
Conjunction
3. Two or more words in sequence that form a syntactic unit that is less than a complete sentence.
Phrase
verbal irony
Dialect
Sonnet
4. Fiction that is intended to frighten - unsettle - or scare the reader. Often overlaps with fantasy and science fiction. Examples include Stephen King's The Shining - Mary Shelley's Frankenstein - and Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes.
Horror
Aphorism
Diction
Fable
5. The study of the sounds of language and their physical properties.
Character
Rhythm
Plot
Phonetics
6. The feeling a text evokes in the reader - such as sadness - tranquility - or elation.
Character
Historical fiction
Mood
Horror
7. A pair of lines of poetic verse written in iambic pentameter.
Heroic couplet
Protagonist
Euphemism
Hubris
8. U U '
Jargon (diction)
Stanza
Anapestic
Vulgarity
9. The telling of a story.
Allegory
Paradox
Meter
Narration
10. A phrase that consists of two contradictory terms
Free verse
Repetition
End rhyme
Oxymoron
11. An expression that has been used so often that it loses its expressive power
Characterization
Cliche
situation irony
Limited omniscient
12. A stanza made up of two rhyming lines.
Jargon
Cliche
Vulgarity
Couplet
13. A literary technique in which the author gives hints or clues about what is to come at some point later in the story.
Fairy Tale
Euphemism
Foreshadowing
Anapestic Meter
14. The set of associations implied by a word in addition to its literal meaning.
Ambiguity
Onomatopoeia
Connotation
Colloquialisms (diction)
15. A humorous verse form of five anapestic (Composed of feet that are short - short - long or unaccented - unaccented - accented) lines with rhyme scheme of aabba.
Vulgarity
Preposition
Limerick
End rhyme
16. The outcome or resolution of plot in a story.
Allusion
Denouement
Autobiography
Refrain
17. A narrative form - such as an epic - legend - myth - song - poem - or fable - that has been retold within a culture for generations. Examples include The People Couldn't Fly retold by Virginia Hamilton and And Green Grass Grew All Around by Alvin Sch
Novel
Dialect
Elegy
Folktale
18. The study of the structure of words.
etymology
Canto
Morphology
Limerick
19. A repetition of the same sound in words close to one another
Personification
Heroic couplet
Assonance
Elegy
20. A category of literature defined by its style - form - and content.
Adjective
Onomatopoeia
Genre
Allegory
21. A group of words containing a subject and a predicate and forming part of a compound or complex sentence.
Voice
Setting
Preposition
Clause
22. A break in the rhythm of language - particularly a natural pause in a in a line of verse - maked in prosody by a double vertical line ( || ). Ex. Arma virumque cano - || Troiae qui primus ab oris .
Onomatopoeia
Plot
Caesura
situation irony
23. A person or thing working against the hero of a literary work (the protagonist).
Characterization
Oxymoron
Cliche
Antagonist
24. A lesson a work of literature is teaching.
Hubris
Clause
Horror
Moral
25. A verb form that usually ends in - ing or - ed.
Horror
Character
Participle
Apostrophe
26. A person's account of his or hew own life.
Moral
Anecdote
Novel
Autobiography
27. A long narrative poem detailing a hero's deeds. Examples include The Aenied by Vergil - The Illiad and The Odyssey by Homer - Beowulf - Don Quixote by Miguel Cervantes - War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy - Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - and Hiawath
Dialect (diction)
Allegory
Apostrophe
Epic
28. The study of the orgin of words
Sonnet
Protagonist
Oxymoron
etymology
29. A person or being in a narrative
Character
Fable
Ballad
First Person
30. The use of words to create pictures in the reader's mind.
Elegy
Fairy Tale
Imagery
Adjective
31. A socially accepted word or phrase used to replace unacceptable language - such as expressions for bodily functions or body parts. Also used as substitutes for straightforward words to tactfully conceal or falsify meaning. Ex. My grandmother passed a
Setting
Euphemism
Vulgarity
Mystery
32. A short story or folktale that contains a moral - which may be expressed explicitly at the end as a maxim. Examples include The Country Mouse and the Town Mouse - The Tortoise and the Hare - and The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing.
Anapestic
Fable
Genre
Participle
33. A narrative technique in which the main story is composed primarily for the purpose of organizing a set of shorter stories - each of which is a story within a story. Examples include Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales - Ovid's Metamorphoses - and Em
Stanza
Alliteration
Point of View
Frame tale
34. A turn from the general audience to address a specific group of persons (or a personified abstraction) who is present of absent. For example - in a recent performance of Shakespeare's Hamlet - Hamlet turned to the audience and spoke directly to one w
Characterization
Pragmatics
Lyric
Apostrophe
35. A story about a person's life written by another person.
Narration
Article
Short story
Biography
36. An extended fictional prose narrative.
Phonology
Novel
situation irony
Connosance
37. Rhyme that occurs within a line of verse.
Malapropism
Internal rhyme
First Person
Denotation
38. A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect - as in I could sleep for a year or this book weighs a ton.
Hyperbole
Repetition
Slang (diction)
Allusion
39. Distinctive features of a person's speech and speech patterns.
Sonnet
Foot
Voice
Blank verse
40. Narrative fiction that involves gods and heroes or has a theme that expresses a culture's ideology. Examples of Greek ______ include Zeus and the Olympians and The Trojan War. Roman ______ include Hercules - Apollo - and Venus.
Protagonist
Conjunction
Anecdote
Myth
41. A word which names a person - place or thing. Ex. boy - river - friend - Mexico - triangle - day - school - truth - university - idea - John F. Kennedy - movie
Limited omniscient
Fable
Noun
Frame tale
42. ' U U
Historical fiction
verbal irony
Dactylic
Iambic (foot)
43. Also known as a run - on line in poetry - _____ occurs when one line ends and continues onto the next line to complete meaning. For example the first line in Thoreau's poem 'My life has been the poem I would have writ -' and the second line completes
Connotation
Document (letter - diary - journal)
Enjambment
Oxymoron
44. The repetition of initial consonant sounds in words - such a 'Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.'
Essay
Euphemism
Alliteration
Heroic couplet
45. A person - place - thing - or event used to represent something else - such as the white flag that represents surrender.
Haiku
Romance
Symbol
Satire
46. ' U
Epic
etymology
Trochaic (foot)
Conflict
47. A word which can be used instead of a noun. Ex instead of saying John is a student - the ____ he can be used in place of the noun John and the sentence becomes He is a student.
Paradox
Malapropism
Dactylic
Pronoun
48. A wise saying - usually short and written.
Meter
Aphorism
Science fiction
Moral
49. Occurs when there are two or more possible meanings to a word or phrase.
Verb
Ambiguity
Biography
Ballad
50. A short narrative - usually between 50 and 100 pages long. Examples include George Orwell's Animal Farm and Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis.
Novella
Protagonist
Mood
Onomatopoeia