A. metaphor
B. simile
C. personification
D. none of the above
Related Mcqs:
- A comparison of unlike things without using a word of comparison such as like or as______________?
A. metaphor
B. simile
C. personification
D. none of the above - Unlike the gods and goddesses of classical epics, John Milton’s God in “Paradise Lost” is and____________?
A. visible, inaccessible
B. inaccessible, omnipresent
C. nonexistent, invisible
D. invisible, omnipresent - ____________is the process by which new words are coined by combining the segments of two different words ?
A. Portmanteau
B. Onomatopoeia
C. Clipping
D. Metanalysis - ______________________is a processes of word formation wherein new words are coined by combining the segments of two different existing words?
A. Compounding
B. Portmanteau
C. Derivation
D. Backformation. - Complete the following sentence. Unlike many Enlightenment thinkers, Adam Smith and Rousseau_____________?
A. traveled to America.
B. believed in God.
C. emphasized the importance of human emotions as guiding behavior.
D. rejected Newton’s view of the universe. - What word did writers in this period use to express quickness of mind, inventiveness,a knack for conceiving images and metaphors and for perceiving resemblances between things apparently unlike ?
A. wit
B. sprezzatura
C. naturalism
D. gusto - What word did writers in this period use to express quickness of mind, inventiveness, a knack for conceiving images and metaphors and for perceiving resemblances between things apparently unlike ?
A. wit
B. sprezzatura
C. naturalism
D. gusto - In his introduction, Milton described the genre of “Samson Agonistes” as_____________?
A. history play
B. tragedy
C. comedy
D. Morality Play - Fill in the blank. In the play, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Puck is also known as_____________?
A. Oberon
B. Robin Goodfellow
C. Demetrius
D. Hermia - The term for the reaction against corruption in the Catholic Church was known as_____________?
A. The Protestant Revolution
B. The Protestant Reformation
C. The Protestant Restoration
D. The Protestant Resolution