Let Reviewer
Let Reviewer
Let Reviewer
“Think at last, we have not reached conclusion, and when I stiffen in a rented house.
Think at last I have not made this show purposely.”
A. Renting houses gives free thought s and dreams
B. Life is best live with others
C. Life in rented rooms are comfortable
D. Ownership of abode is wished for
2. How does his holiness John Paul II look at Buddhism in terms of salvation? He said, “Buddhism
from a certain point of view like Christianity is a religion of salvation. Nevertheless , it needs to
be said right away that the doctrines of salvation in Buddhism and Christianity are opposed:
`The argument thus is;
A. Buddhism and Christianity differ to some degree.
B. Buddhism and Christianity share beliefs in salvation.
C. Christianity and Buddhism are alike.
D. Buddhism is parallel.
3. Walt Whitman is known as a writer of realistic temper. How do the lines from “O captain, My
captain” sound?
“O Captain! My Captain our fearful life is done the ship has weather’d every rack the
prize we sought it’s won; the past is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting; while
fellow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
A. Benjamin Franklin
B. John Bush
C. Abraham Lincoln
D. Franklin D. Roosevelt
6. Nick Joaquin has a way of picturing ”Landscapes without figure” in:
The trend being steadily underground (bombs shelter, catacomb, foshade and
fathoming ever more profound)” man may outmimic mouse and mole find his live limbs
eagerly intruding in Persephone.”
A. Pakistan
B. Afghanistan
C. Israel
D. Saudi Arabia
7. Rizal’s lines proved himself in “Song of a Traveler.” as
A. No man’s land
B. Merchant
C. Physician
D. Traveler
8. Carl Sandburg message says
“There is only one child in the world.
And the child name is all children.”
A. There are different children according to race
B. Children mature into manhood
C. Children are children everywhere
D. Child in one place is just like any other child
9. How was death treated by Tennyson in these lines
“Sunset and evening star, and after that the dark, and may there be no moaning when I
set out to sea”
A. Death is accompanied by darkness
B. Death is sailing away
C. Death happens when the evening star fades
D. Death comes at sunrise
10. T.S. Eliot advocated something in;
“We shall not cease from explanation and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive
where we started…”
A. An unending journey
B. A motivation for success
C. An adventure towards destiny
D. An outgoing trial
“Tragedies were brought on the stage as a means of reminding man of the things which
happen to them.. for a play must end in such a way and even in such cues”
Thus tragedies are
A. Reflections of man’s shortcomings.
B. Reflection of heroes trails and failures.
C. Portrays ends and sorrows.
D. Replay of life’s journey
103. The poem “Seeing” by John Sabella won first prize. What scene do these line portray in
“ In an earthly garden, calmed only by the dark and the flesh called iris, called retina, the
flesh of every name “actually he freezes
It says music
A. Is good only for kings.
B. Is universal
C. Can linger on
D. Has its end
105. Milton speaks of death in “Paradise Lost”. How does he handle the theme in
“Whence the sound of instrument that made melodius chime, was heard, of harp and
organ; and who moved. Their stops and chord, was seen his violent touch.
Fled and pursued transverse the resonant sound”. Hence death
Here is a/an
A. Soliloquy
B. Requiem
C. Obituary
D. Eulogy
120. “To A Waterfowl” by Bryant has this message
“ he whom from zone to zone,
Guides through the boundless
Sky the certain flight,
In the long way that I must thread alone,
Will lead my steps aright.”
A. Pure obedience
B. Defiance of authority
C. Supreme power to obey
D. Command to follow
126. A nod was given as a response to a question. Was there a communication?
KEY ANSWERS:
Novel is roman, short for romance which was applied to longer verse narratives (Malory’s
Morte’ d Arthur) which were later written in prose.
Modern short story differs from earlier short fiction such as the parable, fable and tale, in its
emphasis on character development through scenes rather than summary: through showing
rather than telling.
Satire is a mode which may be employed by writers of various genres: poetry, drama,
fiction and non-fiction. Satire mainly opposes and ridicules, decides and denounces vice,
jolly, evil, stupidity, as these qualities manifest themselves in persons, groups of persons,
ideas, institutions, customs and beliefs.
Prose- expression (whether written or spoken) that does not have a regular rhythmic
pattern.
Poetry- expression that is written in verse, often some form or regular rhythm.
Drama- a story intended to be acted out on a stage mode.
Epic Poetry – is a long poem written on a narrative.
Haiku – single stanza, 3 lines lyric poem of 17 syllables.
Ballads – narrative songs that maybe sung or recited.
Epitaph – a short poem intended for a tombstone (dead)
Piddles – poems presented as mental puzzles meant to be solved.
Tragedy – protagonist (hero or heroine) is overcome in the conflict & meets a tragic end.
Comedy – protagonist meets with a happy end.
Allegory – story in which characters represent abstract qualities or ideas Ex: Superman
Elegy – o poem mourning the dead
Epic – a long poem narrating the adventures of a heroic figure.
Ex: The Iliad and the Odyssey
Fable – a story that illustrates moral often using animals as the characters.
Hyperbole- great exaggerating “I’m so happy I could eat a horse” or “He’s as big as a
house.”
Irony – language that conveys a certain idea by saying just the opposite.
Metaphor – a comparison that doesn’t use “like” or “as”
Ex: I am a rock, I am an island.
Personification – talking about a nonhuman thing as if it were human Ex: “The morning light
mocked our poor hero”
Simile – a comparison that uses “like” or “as”
Ex: She is like the wind.
Sonnet – a 14 lines poem written in iambic pentameter.
Literary Elements:
1. Meaning – identify the writer’s purpose. The important meaning of the work.
PROSE FICTION- is often narrative, generally in the form of a novel or short story.
NON- FICTION- the theme, the central idea of the work, is also called the thesis in
nonfiction prose. The thesis refers to the writer’s position on the subject.
ORGANIZING PRINCIPLES
Analysis paper or review paper is one which you discuss the relationship of the parts of a work
of a whole.
Reaction Paper- is one in which you record your thoughts, feelings & ideas about a work, as in
your reactions of pity & sorrow to Blake’s poem.
Interpretive paper- is one in which you discuss what the author or artist is communicating as in
writing about the feelings of loneliness & isolation in Picasso’s painting.
Jargon – is the special language used by people in a particular field or group to communicate
with others in the same field or group to communicate with others in the same field or group.
Cliché – is an over used phrase or figure of speech that has lost its freshness and its ability to
express thoughts exactly.
Euphemisms- are words that disguise seemingly harsh or offensive realities.
Front page – it contains the most important news of the day either here on abroad.
Editorial Page – it is said to be the “soul” of the newspaper and contains the editorial columns.
The readers views, the masthead and the editorial cartoon.
Sports Section – it contains the news on sports events that happened or will soon happen.
Business Section- contains commercial, industrial and agricultural news and developments here
and abroad.
Shipping Guide – contains the schedule of arrival and departure of local/international vessels,
together with their respective pats of call.
Figurative of Language
1. Metaphor – compares two unlike things, feelings, objects and the simile. Ex: The camel
is the ship of the desert.
2. Similes – compare two dissimilar things but always use the words “as if” (for a clause) or
“like” (for a word phrase). Ex: A camel is like a ship in the desert.
3. Personification – the object that is being personified- referred to as a human with the
personal pronoun sometimes, or possessing human attributes – is capitalized as in “Ode
on a Distant Prospect of Eastern College”
4. Alliteration the repetition of consonants at the beginning of words that are next door to
each other is close by. Ex: “skydark scanted” “man’s mounting”
5. Apostrophe – the direct address of someone or something that is not present. Ex: “Ode
to Psyche” O goddst! Hear these timeless numbers”
6. Assonance- the repetition of vowels sounds usually internally rather than initially.
Ex: Her goodly eyes like sapphires shining bright.
7. Consonance similar to slant rhyme- the repetition of consonant sounds with out the
vowel sound repeated.
“Pied Beauty”: “All Things Counter, original, space, strange,….
Adazzle , dim”
8. Hyperbole refers to large over statement often used to draw attention to a mark of
beauty or a virtue or an action that the poet disagree with. “ A marriage”
9. Irony- plays an important role in voice or tone, inferring a discrepancy between what is
said and what is meant Ex. “Ozymandias” great rider who thought that he and his
name would lost forever “My name is Ozymandics, thing of lenogs/ Look on my works,
Almighty and Despair!”
10. Metonymy – the name for something closely related to it which then takes on a larger
meaning
“You can’t fight city Hall”
“You can’t go home again”
11. Onomatopoeia – a device in which word captures the sound.
“To Autumn”
12. Paradox – a situation or action or feeling that appears to be contradiction but on
inspection turns out to be tried or at least make sense. “The pen is mightier than the
sword.”
Simile- expressed comparison between two dissimilar objects by means of the words like,
as or as if.
Ex: Serenity of mind poises like a gull swinging in air.
Metaphor- gives an implied, not expressed, comparison to two unlike objects. Ex: Good books
are food and drink to an avid reader.
Personification- gives an inanimate object or an abstract idea a human attribute or considers it
alive being. Ex: At last the wind sighed itself to sleep.
Hyperbole- use exaggeration not to deceive but to produce laughter. Ex: Morning, noon and
night her tongue was incessantly doing.
1. “One must commit oneself to a conjunction with the other- forever. But it is not selfless-
it is a maintaining of the self in mystic balance and integrity, like a star balanced with
another star. “The above description of love is stated by Birkin in Women in Love.
2. “My mistress eyes are nothing like the sun; coral is far more red than her lips red: If
snow be white, why then her breast are dun; If hairs be white, black wires grow on her
head.” The author of this line is Shakespeare.
3. “He lived Awidst th’ Untrodden ways, to Rydal Lake that lead a bard whom there ere
none to praise, and very few to read. These lines parody the first stanza of a poem by
Wordsworth.
4. “No, I’ll not weep. I have full cause of weeping, but this heart shall break into a hundred
thousands flaws or ere I’ll weep. O Fool, I shall go read. This passage is from King Fear.
5. I impeach him in the name and by virtue of those eternal laws of justice which he has
violated. I impeach him in the name of human nature itself which he has cruelly
outranged, injured and oppressed….This is form of speech by Edmund Burke
Irony – saying the opposite of what is meant in a manner or in a tone that shows what the
speaker thinks. Ex: It was very kind of you to remind me of my humiliation.
Ullalim- are ballads that narrate the heroic exploits of culture heroes which also emphasize the
bravery and pride of the Kalinga people.
Kinds of Reading
1. Skimming – characterized by quick, cursory reading of a book to get the main idea.
2. Scanning - done by glancing through a line or page to locate a specific information, date,
name of person and number.
3. Extensive reading – leisure type of reading
4. Close Reading or Intensive reading – entails a great deal of attention and concentration
and in depth analysis.
Getting meaning from context clue- vocabulary
Getting the main idea- a central thought or idea is usually contained in a topic sentence.
Noting details – enables reader to spot and remember items/details with in the passage.
Sequencing – enable reader to follow the order or arrangement of ideas as presented by the
writer.
Level of Comprehension
1. Literal level – ability to identify and remember significant details, follow the sequence
and relationship of ideas.
2. Interpretative level – involves skills in referring and forming conclusions.
3. Critical level – to make and evaluations judgment about the content of the selection
using as basis other people’s opinion on the matter or the reader’s personal experience.
4. Application level – equated with creature thinking called reading beyond the lines.
Chinese Proverb – “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you
feed him for a lifetime.
Persian Proverb – The man who speaks the truth is always at ease.
Japanese Proverb – fall seven times, stand up eight.