Statistics for Keystone Literature Exam Part 2

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General Stats

  • This quiz has been taken 44 times
  • The average score is 9 of 15

Answer Stats

HintAnswer% Correct
A story that illustrates a moral often using animals as the character—for example, The Tortoise and the Hare.fable
100%
A huge exaggeration. For example, "Dan's the funniest guy on the planet!" or "That baseball card is worth a zillion dollars!"hyperbole
89%
A poem mourning the dead.elegy
83%
A technique in which an author gives clues about something that will happen later in the story.foreshadowing
78%
Poetry with no set meter (rhythm) or rhyme scheme.free verse
78%
Ten-syllable lines in which every other syllable is stressed. For example: "With eyes like stars upon the brave night air."iambic pentameter
72%
A rhyme that occurs within one line such as "He's King of the Swing."internal rhyme
67%
Language that conveys a certain idea by saying just the opposite.irony
61%
A long poem narrating the adventures of a heroic figure—for example, Homer's The Odyssey.epic poem
56%
The point of view of writing which the narrator refers to himself as "I."first person point of view
50%
A kind of style usually art or literature. Some include poetry, dramas, novels, short stories, memoirs, biographies, etc.genre
44%
The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks, sounds, feels, smells, or taste. Most of the time, it refers to appearance. For example, "The young bird's white, feathered wings flutter as he made his way across the nighttime sky."imagery
44%
Rhyming words that are at the ends of their respective lines—what we typically think of as normal rhyme.
end rhyme
39%
Language that does not mean exactly what it says. For example, you can call someone who is very angry "steaming."figurative language
39%
Language that means exactly what it says.literal language
39%

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