Long Quiz

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Long quiz- HUMMS 1-4

Identification: 1 point each

Direction: Identify and write the correct answer. NO ERASURE

1. It is said to be the imitation of life.


2. It is a literary element that certain feelings of vibe to the story through words and descriptions.
3. It is the point or idea that is central to the story.
4. It is the narrative perspective which describes the position of the narrator.
5. It gives the writer the freedom to add double meanings in fiction.
6. It helps the writer create an atmosphere of suspense in his/her fiction and makes the readers
interested to know more.
7. It seeks to present a greater fidelity of real-life events to texts and performances.
8. It strives to achieve a strong emotional effect on stage.
9. It is the indirect reference of a person, place, thing or idea from the hypo text without describing
in detail the one to which it originally refers.
10. It is the imitation of another work but with deliberate exaggeration to produce comic relief.

True and false: 2 points each


Direction: Write CREATIVE if the statement is true, and write WRITING if the statement if false then
underline the incorrect word/s. NO ERASURE

1. Verbal Irony occurs when the character’s statement carries the same meaning from what is
ostensibly expressed.
2. Setting not only provides background and context but also sets the mood of the readers.
3. Conflict creates tension and interest to the plot.
4. Theme is a lesson drawn from a fiction that may either be explicitly or implicitly found.
5. Diction consists of the lines spoken by the characters in a play.
Matching Type: 2 points each
Directions: Match these examples with their correspondent. NO ERASURE

1. “I could picture it. I have a rotten habit


of picturing the bedroom scenes of my
friends.” – Jake Barnes, The Sun Also
Rises(1962) by Ernest Hemingway a) Protagonist
2. The character stands against a man-
made institution.
3. An internal conflict where the character b) Man Against Man
has to come to terms with his/]her own
nature.
4. “When he found the eyes of Hester c) First Person Point of View
Prynne fastened on his own and saw
that she appeared to recognize him, …”
d) Man Against Nature
– The Scarlet Letter (1850) by Nathaniel
Hawthorne
5. Miss Maudie, from To Kill a e) Man Against Self
Mockingbird (1960), maintained the
characteristics and outlook throughout
the narrative. f) Flat or Static Character
6. Belle of Beauty and the Beast
7. “You walk along between the beds and
seek a faceless stern and suffering, g) Second Person Point of View
which you decide to approach, with the
object of conversing.” – “Sevastolpol in
h) Third Person Point of View
December” (1855) by Leo Tolstoy
8. An external conflict where a character is
against another character. i) Man Against Society
9. The character stands against the forces
of nature such as animal, a storm,
tornado, or snow. j) Round or Dynamic Character
10. Ebenezer Scrooge, from A Christmas
Carol (1843), was very stingy with his
money. He had his employees working
hard for little pay. After his experiences
with the ghosts that visited him, he
changed his ways.

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