310 likes | 387 Views
Literary Terms Review 1-30. 1. _______________ colors sit next to each other on the color wheel. They tend to look pleasant together because they are closely related. A. analogous B. allegorical C. chronological D. cognitive.
E N D
Literary Terms Review1-30 Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
1. _______________ colors sit next to each other on the color wheel. They tend to look pleasant together because they are closely related. A. analogous B. allegorical C. chronological D. cognitive Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
2. Because Mr. and Mrs. Ball are such opposites, it would be fair to say they are _________. A. conceits B. apostrophes C. allegories D. antonyms Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
3. The reference to Aesop’s fable is a/an ____. A. apostrophe B. ellipses C. allegory D. allusion Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
4. "If you weren't so stupid you would have no problem seeing my point of view." asyndeton ad hominem argument C. chronological order D. chiasmus Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
5. The statement that all mid-Easterners are terrorists is an example of _______. generalization figurative language C. allegory D. allusion Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
6. Substituting “deferred success” for “failure” is called a/an _____. euphemism homily C. anaphora D. consonance Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
7. Which device is utilized in the following statement?“Juan thought and thought … and then thought some more. ‘I'm wondering …’ Juan said, bemused.” figurative language B. denotation C. ellipses D. anachronism Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
8. “Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies” includes which of the following poetic devices? alliteration assonance denotation connotation Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
9. The preacher gave a moving __________ this morning. euphemism homily C. generalization D. apostrophe Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
10. When reading poetry, the reader must decide if the poet is using literal or figurative ______ before he can gain meaning from the words. anecdotes cognates diction D. dialects Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
11. The hula dancer placed in context of the civilization of Sumer illustrates a/an _____. A. chronological order B. connotation C. anachronism D. aphorism Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
12. A far-fetched simile or metaphor, this device occurs when the speaker compares two highly dissimilar things. John Donne's "Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," is an example: "Let man's soul be a sphere, and then, in this, / The Intelligence that moves, devotion is." A. conceit B. anecdote C. apostrophe D. euphemism Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
13. _________ is what we use when we talk about intangibles and ideas--things we can’t see, touch, taste, smell, or hear. Superman’s motto of “Truth, justice, and the American Way” is a good example of this type of language. A. literal language B. figurative language C. abstract language D. concrete language Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
14. Describing ice cream as “cold as the water in the Arctic Ocean” is use of ________ language. A. literal B. figurative C. abstract D. concrete Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
15. Examples of ______________ include spoon, table, velvet eye patch, nose ring, sinus mask, green, hot, and walking. Literal language Figurative language Abstract language Concrete language Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
16. In education, teachers commonly use ___________ to introduce something new to students. They compare the new material to something the students already know and understand. A. anaphoras B. allegories C. allusions D. analogies Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
*The E-mail of the species is more deadly than the mail.*A journey of a thousand sites begins with a single click.*You can't teach a new mouse old clicks.*The geek shall inherit the earth.*A chat has nine lives.*Don't byte off more than you can view.17. The previous sentences could be called modern-day _________. A. anecdotes B. apostrophes C. aphorisms D. chiasmi Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
18. One day, a certain Roman nobleman died, leaving enormous debts which had remained hidden during his lifetime. Learning that his estate was being sold at auction, Augustus instructed an agent to buy the man's pillow. Why? "That pillow must be particularly conducive to sleep," he explained, "if its late owner, in spite of his debts, could sleep on it.”You’ve just heard a famous ______ about Caesar Augustus. A. anecdote B. apostrophe C. aphorism D. chiasmus Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
19. The following sentence exhibits ________. Gertie's great-grandma grew aghast at Gertie's grammar. A. consonance B. diction C. chiasmus D. alliteration Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
20. In Robert Frost’s “Tree at My Window,” the speaker addresses the tree throughout: "Tree at my window, window tree.” Frost utilizes __________. A. anecdote B. apostrophe C. aphorism D. chiasmus Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
21. “One should eat to live—not live to eat” is an example of __________. A. conceit B. homily C. chiasmus D. alliteration Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
22. "The Republicans believe that the wagon train will not make it to the frontier unless someof the old, some of the young, some of the weak are left behind by the side of trail."-- Mario Cuomo, 1984 Democratic National Convention Address.The underlined segments represent ______. chronological order anachronism chiasmus D. anaphora Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
1995 Before Sunrise1995 Seven1996 Fargo 1998 Saving Private Ryan1998 Shakespeare In Love1998 L.A. Confidential2000 Traffic 2001 Waking Life 23. These eight extremely important films have been listed by the American Film Institute in what organizational method? chronological order anachronism C. ellipses D. anaphora Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
24. "From now on we are enemies, you and I. Because you choose for your instrument a boastful, lustful, smutty, infantile little boy."-- delivered by F. Murray Abraham (from the movie Amadeus)The underlined segment illustrates _______. A. polysyndeton B. asyndeton C. anecdote D. anaphora Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
Listen to the following lyrics from the musical Cats (which is based on poems from T.S. Eliot):Practical cats, dramaticalcatsPragmatical cats, fanatical catsOratorical cats, Delphic-Oracle catsSkeptical cats, DyspepticalcatsRomantical cats, PedanticalcatsCritical cats, parasitical cats______________ cats, metaphorical catsStatistical cats and mystical catsPolitical cats, hypocritical catsClerical cats, hysterical catsCynical cats, rabbinical cats 25. What one word could fill in the blank to portray cats who always stand for something other than themselves? A. allegorical B. analogical C. aphorical D. elliptical Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
Diction Dialect Assonance Consonance 26. In Mark Twain’s great masterpiece The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck astonishes Jim with stories of kings. Jim had only heard of King Solomon, whom he considers a fool for wanting to chop a baby in half and adds, “Yit dey say Sollermun de wises’ man dat ever live. I doan take no stock in dat.”This quotation is an excellent example of Twain’s use of southern Negro _______ of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
connotation figurative language euphemism denotation 27. The __________ of this image is a brown cross.28. The __________ of this image is a symbol of Christianity. D A Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
assonance consonance alliteration concrete language 29. Stroke and luck provide examples of ________. Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School
apostrophe anecdote cognate anachronism 30. 1. Related by blood; having a common ancestor.2. Related in origin, as certain words in genetically related languages descended from the same ancestral root; for example, English name and Latin nmen from Indo-European *n-men-.3. Related or analogous in nature, character, or function.n. Vickie C. Ball, Harlan High School