AP Lang Sample Exam 2025 UPDATE/PRACTICE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT VERIFIED
ANSWERS (complete solutions) ASSURED SUCCESS/GRADED A+!!!
1. In the opening sentence of his letter to his former master, Douglass does which of the following? -
(answer)C) Understates the nature and condition of their previous relation.
2. In describing the potential effects of his correspondence, Douglass does all of the following EXCEPT? -
(answer)E) Confidently anticipate his former master's viewing him in a more sympathetic light.
3. By the phrase "rights that are merely conventional [. . .]" (lines 21-22), Douglass is referring to the -
(answer)C) Rights protecting his master's privacy
4. The essential implication about those individuals "who entertain a much higher respect for rights that
are merely conventional [. . .]" (lines 20-22) is that they are - (answer)D) Hypocritical
5. In lines 35-46, "All will agree [. . .] for investigation," Douglass does all of the following except -
(answer)C) Levy specific charges against his former master.
6. Douglass' argument for exposing his master's reprehensible conduct (lines 29-50) is founded upon -
(answer)D) Analogy
7. In the second paragraph Douglass suggest that the imminent nature of his escape triggered
antithetical feelings of - (answer)A) Anticipation and Apprehension
8. Douglass's "lamenting that (he) was a man, and wishing (him)self a brute" (lines 59-60) was likely
motivated by a(n) - (answer)B) Acute consciousness of the degradation of his enslavement.
9. Douglass uses the phrase "treasured up" (line 61) to convey which of the following?
I. The rarity of a successful escape from bondage.
ANSWERS (complete solutions) ASSURED SUCCESS/GRADED A+!!!
1. In the opening sentence of his letter to his former master, Douglass does which of the following? -
(answer)C) Understates the nature and condition of their previous relation.
2. In describing the potential effects of his correspondence, Douglass does all of the following EXCEPT? -
(answer)E) Confidently anticipate his former master's viewing him in a more sympathetic light.
3. By the phrase "rights that are merely conventional [. . .]" (lines 21-22), Douglass is referring to the -
(answer)C) Rights protecting his master's privacy
4. The essential implication about those individuals "who entertain a much higher respect for rights that
are merely conventional [. . .]" (lines 20-22) is that they are - (answer)D) Hypocritical
5. In lines 35-46, "All will agree [. . .] for investigation," Douglass does all of the following except -
(answer)C) Levy specific charges against his former master.
6. Douglass' argument for exposing his master's reprehensible conduct (lines 29-50) is founded upon -
(answer)D) Analogy
7. In the second paragraph Douglass suggest that the imminent nature of his escape triggered
antithetical feelings of - (answer)A) Anticipation and Apprehension
8. Douglass's "lamenting that (he) was a man, and wishing (him)self a brute" (lines 59-60) was likely
motivated by a(n) - (answer)B) Acute consciousness of the degradation of his enslavement.
9. Douglass uses the phrase "treasured up" (line 61) to convey which of the following?
I. The rarity of a successful escape from bondage.