A. A waterfall.
B. Electricity.
C. A war.
D. A factory.
Related Mcqs:
- In what way is Jane Toomer’s Cane an example of Modernism ?
A. Its fractured, collage effect.
B. Its insistence on plot.
C. Its focus on landscape.
D. Its focus on modern city life. - According to the position of lips vowels can be divided into__________?
A. Round vowels & unrounded vowels
B. Front vowels & back vowels
C. High vowels & low vowels
D. Tense vowels &lax vowels - Sounds articulated by two lips are called ____________?
A. Dental
B. Bilabial
C. Labio__dental
D. Alveolar - The most popular French playwright, Jean Baptiste Poquelin, is known as______________?
A. Caleron
B. Corneille
C. Couperin
D. Moliere - The supportive network of female slaves led to_______________?
A. Resistance to the overseers.
B. Learning to be midwives.
C. Resistance against dehumanization.
D. Lower suicide rates. - “He will give the gloom of gloom, and the sunshine of sunshine”. The pronoun “He” refers to_______________?
A. God
B. Painter
C. Sculptor
D. Author - The prose of the Romantic period had a tendency to_______________?
A. Objectify the issue in terms of a cause
B. Advance a single system to the public
C. Allow the writer to draw on his
D. Be brooding and meditative. own personality - Compared to Aquinas, the writers of Florentine humanism considered which of the following only unsystematically ?
A. Sex
B. Emotions
C. Psychology
D. All of the above - In Amy Lowell’s imagist poem, “This Green Bowl,” a handmade bowl is compared to a pond in the woods. Can one say that, as in Pound’s “Cantos,” this poem’s dominant tone is impersonal? Why, or why not ?
A. Yes, Lowell’s detailed description of nature draws attention away from human realities.
B. Yes, the lyrical voice in Lowell’s poem seeks to express universal rather than individual experience.
C. No, Lowell’s poem is not impersonal; it addresses the maker of the bowl directly and speculates about his state of mind.
D. No, even though Lowell strives for impersonal expression by borrowing poetic devices from Pound, she fails to accomplish this - In Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, living underground is symbolic of_____________?
A. The narrator’s attempt to stay hidden.
B. The narrator’s desire to be safe.
C. The narrator’s invisibility to society.
D. The narrator’s attempt to stay out of prison.