English studies
  • 1. English studies is a broad academic field that encompasses the study of English language and literature. It involves analyzing and interpreting various forms of English texts, such as novels, poetry, plays, and essays, to understand their historical, cultural, and linguistic significance. Students of English studies often engage with critical theory and literary criticism to develop deep insights into the meaning and interpretation of texts. Additionally, English studies also examines the evolution of the English language itself, exploring its grammar, vocabulary, and usage over time. Overall, English studies provides a rich and rewarding opportunity to explore the complexities of language, literature, and culture.

    Who is considered the father of English literature?
A) Geoffrey Chaucer
B) Jane Austen
C) Charles Dickens
D) William Shakespeare
  • 2. Which language family does English belong to?
A) Austronesian
B) Indo-European
C) Sino-Tibetan
D) Afro-Asiatic
  • 3. What is the term used for the study of the sounds of language?
A) Morphology
B) Syntax
C) Phonetics
D) Pragmatics
  • 4. Who wrote the novel 'Pride and Prejudice'?
A) Jane Austen
B) Charlotte Brontë
C) Virginia Woolf
D) Emily Brontë
  • 5. What is the name for a word that is the opposite in meaning to another word?
A) Homonym
B) Antonym
C) Synonym
D) Homophone
  • 6. Who is the author of the novel '1984'?
A) George Orwell
B) Ray Bradbury
C) Aldous Huxley
D) J.R.R. Tolkien
  • 7. Who wrote the play 'Romeo and Juliet'?
A) Ben Jonson
B) Christopher Marlowe
C) Douglas Adams
D) William Shakespeare
  • 8. What is the study of word formation?
A) Phonology
B) Morphology
C) Pragmatics
D) Syntax
  • 9. Who wrote the poem 'The Raven'?
A) Robert Frost
B) Langston Hughes
C) Edgar Allan Poe
D) Emily Dickinson
  • 10. What literary device is used to make an implicit comparison between two things?
A) Hyperbole
B) Simile
C) Personification
D) Metaphor
  • 11. Which of the following is a play by Tennessee Williams?
A) A Streetcar Named Desire
B) Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
C) The Crucible
D) Death of a Salesman
  • 12. What is the opening line of Charles Dickens' 'A Tale of Two Cities'?
A) All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
B) It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.
C) In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
D) Call me Ishmael.
  • 13. Who wrote the play 'The Importance of Being Earnest'?
A) George Bernard Shaw
B) Arthur Miller
C) Oscar Wilde
D) Tom Stoppard
  • 14. Who wrote the novel 'To Kill a Mockingbird'?
A) Harper Lee
B) Maya Angelou
C) Mark Twain
D) John Steinbeck
  • 15. What is the term for the central character of a literary work?
A) Antihero
B) Deuteragonist
C) Antagonist
D) Protagonist
  • 16. Who is the author of 'The Catcher in the Rye'?
A) Ernest Hemingway
B) F. Scott Fitzgerald
C) J.D. Salinger
D) Arthur C. Clarke
  • 17. Which novel features the character Sherlock Holmes?
A) Dracula
B) Pride and Prejudice
C) A Study in Scarlet
D) Wuthering Heights
  • 18. What is the term for a story that symbolizes a deeper moral or spiritual concept?
A) Satire
B) Parody
C) Fable
D) Allegory
  • 19. Who is the author of the poem 'The Waste Land'?
A) Sylvia Plath
B) T.S. Eliot
C) W.B. Yeats
D) Robert Browning
  • 20. In poetry, what term is used to describe the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables?
A) Alliteration
B) Simile
C) Rhyme
D) Meter
  • 21. Who is the author of the novel 'Moby-Dick'?
A) Henry James
B) Nathaniel Hawthorne
C) Mark Twain
D) Herman Melville
  • 22. Who wrote the play 'Death of a Salesman'?
A) Lorraine Hansberry
B) August Wilson
C) Tennessee Williams
D) Arthur Miller
  • 23. What literary movement focused on capturing ordinary, everyday life in literature?
A) Modernism
B) Symbolism
C) Romanticism
D) Realism
  • 24. What is a group of rhymed lines in a poem called?
A) Stanza
B) Meter
C) Rhyme
D) Verse
  • 25. What is the term for the struggle between the protagonist and antagonist in a story?
A) Theme
B) Setting
C) Resolution
D) Conflict
  • 26. What literary device is used to give non-human things human characteristics?
A) Metaphor
B) Simile
C) Personification
D) Hyperbole
  • 27. In a play, what is a soliloquy?
A) A dramatic monologue
B) A conversation between two characters
C) An aside to the audience
D) A speech by a character alone on stage
  • 28. What is the term for a reference to another work of literature in a literary work?
A) Irony
B) Foreshadowing
C) Symbolism
D) Allusion
  • 29. What is the term for the central message or lesson of a story?
A) Plot
B) Character
C) Theme
D) Conflict
  • 30. What literary device is used to hint at future events in a story?
A) Flashback
B) Foreshadowing
C) Irony
D) Symbolism
  • 31. What is the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words called?
A) Consonance
B) Onomatopoeia
C) Alliteration
D) Assonance
  • 32. What type of literature is written to be performed by actors?
A) Drama
B) Non-fiction
C) Poetry
D) Prose
  • 33. What is the term for the use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices?
A) Parody
B) Allegory
C) Satire
D) Fable
  • 34. Who is the author of 'Frankenstein'?
A) H.G. Wells
B) Jules Verne
C) Bram Stoker
D) Mary Shelley
  • 35. What is the term for the use of words that imitate sounds?
A) Assonance
B) Onomatopoeia
C) Consonance
D) Alliteration
  • 36. Who is known for creating the detective character Hercule Poirot?
A) Ruth Rendell
B) Dorothy L. Sayers
C) Patricia Highsmith
D) Agatha Christie
  • 37. What is the term for the use of words or phrases that appeal to the five senses?
A) Alliteration
B) Hyperbole
C) Imagery
D) Onomatopoeia
  • 38. What is the term for the omission of a word or words that are superfluous or able to be understood from contextual clues?
A) Ellipsis
B) Euphemism
C) Anaphora
D) Metaphor
  • 39. Which literary period is characterized by a revival of interest in classical forms and learning?
A) Renaissance
B) Romanticism
C) Postmodernism
D) Victorian
  • 40. Which poet is known for his collection 'Leaves of Grass'?
A) Walt Whitman
B) Robert Frost
C) Langston Hughes
D) Emily Dickinson
  • 41. What is the term for a long, narrative poem that typically involves heroic deeds and events?
A) Epic
B) Sonnet
C) Limerick
D) Haiku
  • 42. Who wrote the play 'Oedipus Rex'?
A) Euripides
B) Sophocles
C) Aristophanes
D) Aeschylus
  • 43. Which of these is NOT a Jane Austen novel?
A) Emma
B) Sense and Sensibility
C) Persuasion
D) Wuthering Heights
  • 44. What literary term is defined as the repetition of similar vowel sounds within a sentence or a line of poetry?
A) Consonance
B) Alliteration
C) Assonance
D) Onomatopoeia
  • 45. Which of these authors is associated with the movement known as the Harlem Renaissance?
A) Virginia Woolf
B) Ernest Hemingway
C) Langston Hughes
D) F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • 46. Who wrote the play 'A Streetcar Named Desire'?
A) Edward Albee
B) Arthur Miller
C) Tennessee Williams
D) Eugene O'Neill
  • 47. Who wrote the dystopian novel 'Brave New World'?
A) Aldous Huxley
B) George Orwell
C) Margaret Atwood
D) Ray Bradbury
  • 48. What is the correct term for a word that is the same as another word?
A) Synonym
B) Palindrome
C) Homonym
D) Antonym
  • 49. Who wrote the epic poem 'Paradise Lost'?
A) Dante Alighieri
B) William Wordsworth
C) John Milton
D) Geoffrey Chaucer
  • 50. What is the study and interpretation of literature called?
A) Literary criticism
B) Philosophy
C) Psychology
D) Linguistics
  • 51. Which American poet penned 'The Road Not Taken'?
A) Robert Frost
B) Langston Hughes
C) Sylvia Plath
D) Emily Dickinson
  • 52. What type of poem has a fixed number of lines and a specific rhyme scheme?
A) Free verse
B) Sonnet
C) Haiku
D) Limerick
  • 53. What is the correct term for a play on words that sound similar but have different meanings?
A) Pun
B) Paradox
C) Alliteration
D) Oxymoron
  • 54. Who wrote 'Wuthering Heights'?
A) Jane Austen
B) Emily Brontë
C) Daphne du Maurier
D) Charlotte Brontë
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