Literary Terms and More Quiz
- Question: Which writer is noted for publishing a dictionary in 1755 and a book called The Lives of the Poets?
- Answer: Although he is perhaps best known for his A Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1755, Samuel Johnson is also remembered for his last great work, Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, to the Works of the English Poets (conventionally known as The Lives of the Poets). When Johnson was approached by some London booksellers in 1777 to write what he thought of as “little Lives, and little Prefaces, to a little edition of the English Poets,” he readily agreed. He loved anecdotes and “the biographical part” of literature best of all. The project, however, expanded in scope; Johnson’s prefaces alone filled the first 10 volumes (1779–81), and the poetry grew to 56 volumes.
- Question: What term is used for a word that has been taken into a language from another language?
- Answer: Loanwords are words taken into a language from another language when new things are experienced as the result of contact with speakers of other languages. This is part of the history of every language, except for one spoken by an impossibly isolated community. Tea from Chinese, coffee from Arabic, and tomato, potato, and tobacco from American Indian languages are examples of loanwords designating new products that have been added to the vocabulary of English.
- Question: What is the name given to a pair of rhyming lines of verse that are self-contained in grammatical structure and meaning?
- Answer: A couplet is a pair of end-rhymed lines of verse that are self-contained in grammatical structure and meaning. Couplets are most frequently used as units of composition in long poems, but, since they lend themselves to pithy, epigrammatic statements, they are often composed as independent poems or function as parts of other verse forms.
- Question: What is the name given to a fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of 14 lines that are typically five-foot iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme?
- Answer: The sonnet as a form seems to have originated in the 13th century among the Sicilian school of court poets, who were influenced by the love poetry of Provençal troubadours. The sonnet was introduced to England, along with other Italian verse forms, by Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, earl of Surrey, in the 16th century. The rhyme scheme of the English sonnet is abab cdcd efef gg. Its greater number of rhymes makes it a less demanding form than the Petrarchan sonnet, but this is offset by the difficulty presented by the couplet, which must summarize the impact of the preceding quatrains with the compressed force of a Greek epigram.
- Question: What term refers to the structure of interrelated actions, consciously selected and arranged by the author?
- Answer: Plot involves a considerably higher level of narrative organization than normally occurs in a story or fable. According to E.M. Forster in Aspects of the Novel (1927), a story is a “narrative of events arranged in their time-sequence,” whereas a plot organizes the events according to a “sense of causality.”
- Question: Which is the earliest known English play in blank verse?
- Answer: The earliest known English play in blank verse is Gorboduc (1561) by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton. It is a tragedy based on British chronicle history that draws a grave political moral about irresponsible government.
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© duncan1890—iStock/Getty Images
© duncan1890—iStock/Getty Images