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Exam (elaborations)

CSET English Subtest I and II Question with complete solution 2023

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CSET English Subtest I and II Question with complete solution 2023homophones These are words that are pronounced the same, but have different meanings and spelling. example: capital (seat of the government) and capitol (government building) Homonyms words that are spelled and pronounced the same,yet have a different meaning Ex. Tear-when you cry tear-when something rips Homographs words that are spelled alike but have different sounds and meanings (bow and arrow vs. bow of a ship) . Prepositional Phrase a group of words beginning with a preposition and ending with a noun or pronoun Example: Out of bed, down the tree, through the forest, up the hill, around the lake, etc. Adverb Phrase a prepositional phrase that modifies a verb, an adjective, or an adverb Example: The bears were in the bed. Mama bear is naive about her bears. Participial Phrase A verb form that is used as an adjective Example: Sleeping soundly, she got her rest. Chewing loudly, people started to stare. Gerund Phrase A verb form that is used as a noun Example: Disciplinging the dogs is a teadious task. Singing to the audience makes me nervous. Infinitive Phrase to + verb used as an adjective, adverb, or noun Example: To learn how to read, Ana practices reading everyday before bedtime. To calm her nerves, Mama Jo knits. Independent Clause a group of words with a subject and verb that is a complete thought. Example: It was after midnight and Mother was downstairs. Subordinate Clause a group of words with a subject and a verb that MUST be combined with an independent clause to form a complete though. Example: Mrs. Smith, who was cooking breakfast downstairs at the time, did not hear the kids leave the house. Adjective Clause A subordinate clause that, like an adjective, modifies a noun or pronoun. Usually it starts with a WHO, WHOM, WHICH and THAT. Example: Maria, WHO I went to school with, is getting married this Saturday. My friends were surprised THAT the event was kept down low. Noun Clause A subordinate clause used as a noun Example: Do you know WHAT THE DOGS WILL DO NEXT? ANYONE WHO DISCOVERS THE KIDS ARE OUT AT NIGHT will tell police. Adverb Clause A subordinate clause that, like any adverb, modifies a verb, adjective, or an adverb. Words used before clause (after, before, when, since, unless, while) Example: Mama Jo knits WHEREVER SHE CAN. The animals get out at night most THAN I DO. We ate the cookies AFTER dinner. Trickster Tale in oral traditions worldwide, a story featuring a protagonist (often an anthropomorphized animal) who has magical powers and is characterized as a compendium of opposites. TT= FEMT Slave Narrative autobiographical account of the life of a slave Villanelle a nineteen-line poem divided into five tercets and a final quatrain bildungsroman a type of novel concerned with the education, development, and maturing of a young protagonist Example: The Magic Fountain, A Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce, A Sentemental Education classicism a movement in literature and art during the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe that favored rationality and restraint and strict forms romanticism a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization realism A 19th century artistic movement in which writers and painters sought to show life as it is rather than life as it should be modernism was an artistic and literary movement of the early 20th century that championed experimentation, technicality, primitivism, impersonalism, aestheticism, and intellectualism Neoclassical characterized the arts in Europe during the late 1700s -a time when authors and artists tried to bring back the elements and values of the classical times (Greek and Roman) Alexander Pope, John Dryden, and Samuel Johnson - a fondness for satire and an inclination to make generalizations about the world in the form of aphoristic verse, Rationalism 17th- 18th century held that all truths, especially religious ones, were accessible and comprehensible through pure human reason; reason was in itself a source of knowledge superior to and independent of sense perceptions. Parnassian Of or relating to poetry, relating to the Parnassians or their style of poetry- A member of a school of late 19th-century French poets whose work is characterized by detachment and emphasis on metrical form. new formalist Mid - late 20th century, return to strict form, response to free verse Symbolist Symbolism was an aesthetic movement that encouraged writers to express their ideas, feelings, and values by means of symbols or suggestions rather than by direct statements. imagist 20th Century movement of poetry; typically written in free verse, draws on a wide range of subject matter, is expressed in common speech, and relies on a clear, concentrated image to convey meaning. Comic irony The audience knows more than the character knows and creates humor stream-of-consciousness narrative characterized by a writing technique or style that is free and indirect and seeks to record in an all-inclusive way the continuous flow of the narrator's thoughts, feelings, memories, and expectations. Stream-ofconsciousness narrative can also be somewhat discursive and repetitive. ("Beaten up, broken up, . . . the brutality . . . the eager advance . . . of angular men . . . of flaunting women . . . ") stream-of-consciousness a literary genre that reveals a character's thoughts and feeling as they develop by means of a long soliloquy Deus ex machina The phrase has come to mean any turn of events that solves the characters' problems through an unexpected and unlikely intervention. ambivalence the state of having contradictory or conflicting emotional attitudes or opinions Theatre of the Absurd tries to capture the absurdity of the human condition; man is in charge and god is absent, lack of humanity-no meaning to life, actors are clown-like, no hope Example: Waiting for Godot deference courteous regard for people's feelings condescension a patronizing manner or behavior benevolence an act intending or showing kindness and good will conciliation the state of manifesting goodwill and cooperation after being reconciled postcolonial literary criticism Postcolonial literary criticism explores how colonization continues to affect former colonized societies. The literature of colonized cultures reflects their common experience of colonization, an experience that may be presented differently in the texts of colonizing nations. Structuralist Criticism relies heavily on linguistics and linguistic theory to analyze literary works. One structuralist view holds that a literary work is a mode of writing that consists of an interaction of various constitutent parts according to wholly literary conventions, codes, and genres. figurative language language that is used in writing to produce images in a reader's mind and to express ideas in fresh, vivid, and imaginative ways Formalist Criticism Formalist criticism focuses on the way individual literary elements combine to create a coherent whole text, independent of outside factors such as the author's life or intent, or the sociocultural and historical context. Formalist critics, for example, might examine how structure or syntax contributes to the theme or overall emotional impact of a text. Parallel structures the repetition of phrases , clauses, or sentencesthat have the same grammatical structure Psychoanalytic criticism based on the idea that literary works can reflect the imagined fulfillment of the author's thoughts and desires that are denied in real, everyday life or are prohibited by social or cultural standards—i.e., thoughts and desires that are censored by the self, or repressed. Great Vowel Shift A systematic shifting of the long vowels (in milliseconds) of Middle English into different sounds. The high back and high front vowels became diphthongs while the other long vowels moved higher and sometimes fronter in the mouth, e.g., the vowel in the word "sweet" was "ay" for Chaucer but "eee" by the time of Shakespeare. The spelling of certain vowel sounds no longer corresponded to the pronuciation of those sounds. The drop of the e as well.

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