2016 Literature-In-English WAEC SSCE (School Candidates) May/June: Difference between revisions
Line 437: | Line 437: | ||
<p>Develop not fewer than '''five''' points in your answers.</p> | <p>Develop not fewer than '''five''' points in your answers.</p> | ||
==== Section A - African Drama ==== | ==== Section A - African Drama ==== | ||
<p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | '''DELE CHARLEY : The blood of a stranger''' <p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | ||
<ol> | <ol> | ||
<li> | <li>Consider the view that the play exposes the colonialist exploitation of Africa.</li> | ||
<li> | <li>Examine the role of Kindo as a warlord in the play '''FRANK OGODO OGECHE: Harvest of Corruption''' </li> | ||
<li> | <li>Comment on Alobo as a victim of circumstance in the play </li> | ||
<li> | <li>Discuss the role of chie Maladu Ade-Amaka in the play </li> | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
==== Section B - Non-African Drama ==== | ==== Section B - Non-African Drama ==== | ||
<p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | '''LORRAINE HANSBERRY: A Raisin in the Sun''' <p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | ||
<ol start = "5"> | <ol start = "5"> | ||
<li> | <li>What impression do you form of Mama’s character in the play? </li> | ||
<li> | <li>Consider the importance of the check in the play '''OLIVER GODSMITH: She Stoops to Conquer'''</li> | ||
<li> | <li>Examine the use of dramatic irony in the play</li> | ||
<li> | <li>Assess the character of Mrs. Hardcastle in the play</li> | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
==== Section A - African Poetry ==== | ==== Section A - African Poetry ==== | ||
<p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | <p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | ||
<ol start = "9"> | <ol start = "9"> | ||
<li> | <li>Discuss the clash of cultures in Okara’s “Piano and Drums” </li> | ||
<li> | <li>Examine the persona’s view of ageing in " The panic of growing older"</li> | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
==== Section B - Non-African Poetry ==== | ==== Section B - Non-African Poetry ==== | ||
<p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | <p>Answer '''one''' question only from this section</p> | ||
<ol start = "11"> | <ol start = "11"> | ||
<li> | <li>Comment on the poet’s attitude to nature in Frost's “Birches”. </li> | ||
<li> | <li>Examine the theme of beauty in the Poem “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?” </li> | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
[[Category:WAEC Literature-In-English]] | [[Category:WAEC Literature-In-English]] |
Revision as of 13:21, 3 October 2024
Literature-In-English 1 - Objective
Section A
Answer all questions in this section
Part 1: General Knowledge of Literature
- ……. refers to the structure of a Work of art.
- Form
- Plot
- Setting
- Style
- Conflict in a literary work begins to unfold with
- climax
- episode
- exposition
- revolution
- The character assumed by the author in his writing is
- protagonist
- chores
- persona
- pseudonym
- Oral literature is part of
- drama
- folklore
- poetry
- music
- Poetry is written
- chapters
- paragraphs
- scenes
- lines
- soliloquy is a ........ technique
- descriptive
- dramatic
- narrative
- poetic
- The ....... produces comic relief in drama
- chorus
- protagonist
- antagonist
- clown
- A short play is also called a
- farce
- novelette
- playlet
- slapstick Read the stanza and answer questions 9 to 11. For days I wept and felt depressed The one and all I loved had left But then on me our Bill impressed “Your love is where she looks bereft’
- The rhyme scheme is
- abab
- aaba
- abcc
- abbc
- The lines are iambic
- pentameter
- trimeter
- tetrameter
- hexameter
- The lines constitutes
- an epic
- quatrain
- an ode
- sestet
- “The sun smiled gently on the scene illustrates
- paradox
- euphemism
- hyperbole
- personification
- The major part of the Petrarchan sonnet is the
- quintet
- sestet
- terete
- octave
- A poem that celebrates an object, person or event is
- sonnet
- a dirge
- an ode
- a ballad
- That it will rain is not unlikely illustrates the use of
- irony
- litotes
- metaphor
- metonymy
- An... is an indirect and usually unfavorable remark.
- allusion
- irony
- aside
- innuendo
- “Many hands make light work’ illustrates
- zeugma
- hyperbole
- metonymy
- synecdoche
- Through....the ills of society are criticized with the objective of having them corrected.
- dramatic irony
- comic relief
- satire
- farce Read the following lines to answer questions 19 and 20. The livid waters roared and snarled and flapped At the poor battered and weeping yacht.
- The dominant literary device used in the lines is
- simile
- alliteration
- assonance
- personification
- The picture presented is one of
- quiet sea
- dark sky
- stormy weather
- calm season
Part 2: Unseen Prose and Poetry
Read the passage below and answer questions 21 to 25
**passage (please replace this text with the provided passage in the source editor with each paragraph of the passage inside a separate <p></p> tag).
- Question 21
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 22
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 23
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 24
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- Question 25
- Option a
- Option b
- Option c
- Option d
- 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
- Question 1
- Question 2
- Question 3
- Question 4
Section B - Non-African Prose
Answer one question only from this section
- Question 5
- Question 6
- Question 7
- Question 8
Literature-In-English 3 - Drama and Poetry
Develop not fewer than five points in your answers.
Section A - African Drama
DELE CHARLEY : The blood of a stranger
Answer one question only from this section
- Consider the view that the play exposes the colonialist exploitation of Africa.
- Examine the role of Kindo as a warlord in the play FRANK OGODO OGECHE: Harvest of Corruption
- Comment on Alobo as a victim of circumstance in the play
- Discuss the role of chie Maladu Ade-Amaka in the play
Section B - Non-African Drama
LORRAINE HANSBERRY: A Raisin in the Sun
Answer one question only from this section
- What impression do you form of Mama’s character in the play?
- Consider the importance of the check in the play OLIVER GODSMITH: She Stoops to Conquer
- Examine the use of dramatic irony in the play
- Assess the character of Mrs. Hardcastle in the play
Section A - African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- Discuss the clash of cultures in Okara’s “Piano and Drums”
- Examine the persona’s view of ageing in " The panic of growing older"
Section B - Non-African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- Comment on the poet’s attitude to nature in Frost's “Birches”.
- Examine the theme of beauty in the Poem “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?”