Literature-In-English 1 - Objective
Section A
Answer all questions in this section
Part 1: General Knowledge of Literature
- Something a character says on stage that is meant for audience alone is......
- an epilogue
- a mime
- a soliloquy
- an aside
- A pause with a line of poetry is ....
- an alliteration
- a caesura
- a metre
- an assonance
- A recurring idea, image, or a group of images that unifies a work of literature is ......
- motif
- allusion
- legend
- anecdote
- When you are old and grey and full of sleep. The rhythmic pattern of the above line is......
- anapestic
- dactylic
- trochaic
- iambic
- An inscription on a tombstone is an ......
- Epitaph
- Epistle
- Epigram
- Ode
- A three-line stanza, rhymed ABA, BCD, CDC is a ........
- couplet
- haiku
- terza rima
- heroic couplet
- The chorus normally features prominently in ......
- poetry
- the epic
- the novel
- drama
- A story which explains a natural phenomenon or justifies the beliefs of a society is A. B. C. D.
- myth
- legend
- motif
- fable
- The dominant literary device is
- the epithet
- the rhetorical question
- verbal irony
- paradox
- Does it stink like rotten meat? makes use of the sense of ........
- taste
- touch
- sight
- smell
- The mood of the poem is one of ....
- joy
- doubt
- anger
- certainty
- A short play performed in the pause in between the act of a longer play is ....
- denouement
- interlude
- prologue
- epilogue
- The most intense part of a conflict is the
- resolution
- climax
- denouement
- dues ex machina
- I feel a million times better than I felt yesterday is ........
- an apostrophe
- a euphemism
- an irony
- a hyperbole
- Identify the odd item:
- third person narrative
- literary appreciation
- first person narrative
- epistolary technique
- A dramatist is someone who ..... plays
- writes
- directs
- commissions
- promotes
- Nando's family lives within the lower income bracket illustrates ......
- sarcasm
- allusion
- climax
- euphemism
- A dramatic performance without word is
- mime
- an aside
- monologue
- a soliloquy
- Utopia is a term used to describe .......
- Strange circumstances
- difficult conditions
- pleasant feelings
- ideal societies
- The lawyer addressed the bench illustrates ....
- simile
- oxymoron
- alliteration
- metonymy
Part 2: Unseen Prose and Poetry
Read the passage below and answer questions 21 to 25
When he was little, he would ask his mother sometimes, as he lay in the cold little room and looked up at her as she sat beside his bed stroking his hair, why two boys from his class had thrown stones at a dog; or why on another occasion a gang of them had broken into an empty house, smashing the thick door which had curved mouldings on the front which had been turned by carpenters years before; or why he had ended up in a fight which had begun when a little girl had shouted names at him which made no sense about his house and his mother and others had joined in and he had rushed at them, scattering them as some shrieked and some laughed and he flailed about with his hard little fists and tears in his eyes. His mother would smile, say ‘shhh’ and he would drift to sleep with the heart shape of her face imprinted on his mind.
- The dominant feeling in the passage is that of A. B. C. D.
- nostalgia
- anger
- expectancy
- fear
- The. feeling is conveyed by the ..
- mouldings on the door
- boys' actions
- tender care of his mother
- little girl’s taunts
- The dominant literary device in the passage ..
- personification
- antithesis
- litotes
- parallelism
- .....and he rushed at them, scattering them as some shrieked and some laughed illustrates
- onomatopoeia
- climax
- metaphor
- humorous
- The main character is ....
- playful
- inquisitive
- sad
- metonymy
- Question 26
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 27
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 28
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 29
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 30
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
Section B
Answer all questions in this section
- Question 31
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 32
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 33
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 34
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 35
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 36
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 37
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 38
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 39
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 40
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 41
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 42
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 43
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 44
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 45
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 46
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 47
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 48
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 49
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 50
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
Literature-In-English 2 - Prose
Answer two questions in all; one from each section.
Develop not fewer than five points in your answers.
Section A - African Prose
Answer one question only from this section
- BUCHI EMECHETA: Second Class Citizen How are women treated in the novel? ..
- Comment on Adah’s growth in confidence and determination in pursuit of her dreams
- ALEX A. AGYIRI: Unexpected Joy at Dawn Discuss Nii’s encounter with I—put-it-to-me in the novel.
- Consider Mama Orojo’s relationship with her church members in Amen Kristi
Section B - Non-African Prose
Answer one question only from this section
- RALPH ELLISON: Invisible Man Comment on the character and role of Mary in the novel.
- Examine the narrator’s experiences at the eviction.
- EMILE BRONTE: Wuthering Heights Comment on the importance of setting in the novel.
- Examine the relationship between Heathcliff and Lockwood
Literature-In-English 3 - Drama and Poetry
Develop not fewer than five points in your answers.
Section A - African Drama
Answer one question only from this section
- JOHN K. KARGBO: Let Me Die Alone Comment on the character of Yoko in the play
- What challenges in Mende chiefdom confronted with in the play?
- WOLE SOYINKA: The Lion and the Jewel Why does Lakunle lose Sidi to Baroka?
- Examine the Theme of lose and marriage in the play
Section B - Non-African Drama
Answer one question only from this section
- JOHN OSBORNE: Look Back in Anger ; : 13. Compare Jimmy and Cliff as friends, 14. Discuss Jimmy Porter’s sense of alienation. AUGUST WILSON: Fences 15. Consider Raynell’s contribution to the plot. 16. Comment on the appropriateness of the title, Fences.
- Question 6
- Question 7
- Question 8
Section A - African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- Discuss the personification of -rage in the poem, Raider of the Treasure Trove.
- Show how Africa suffered and sur vives still in Agostinho Neto’s The Grieved Lands of Africa.
Section B - Non-African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- Consider the use of alliteration, assonance and repetition in the poem Binsey Poplars.
- Comment on the poet's attitude to death in Do not Go Gentle into that Good Night