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157 Terms
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1
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"Death be not proud"- Donne uses personification in order to:
make death as vulnerable as human beings
2
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"Death be not proud"- According to the speaker
others see death as:
3
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"Death be not proud"- The speaker sees death as:
rest and sleep
4
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"Death be not proud"- The speaker states that death dwells with:
poison
5
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"Death be not proud"- According to the speaker
what is more effective than death?
6
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"Death be not proud"- Death is a slave to:
chance
7
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"Death be not proud"- At the end of the poem
Death:
8
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"A Valediction Forbidding Morning"- According to the speaker
virtuous men pass \________ away
9
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"A Valediction Forbidding Morning"- The people outside their relationship are:
laity
10
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"A Valediction Forbidding Morning"- Dull sublunary lovers soul is:
sense
11
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"A Valediction Forbidding Morning"- An example of a metaphysical conceit:
comparing beaten gold to love
12
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"A Valediction Forbidding Morning"- \_________ makes the speaker's "circle just"
his wife's firmness
13
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"Mediation 17"- This work is best described as a:
sermon
14
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"Mediation 17"- Each man's life is like a:
chapter in a book
15
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"Mediation 17"- When a person dies
his life is translated into a \___________ language
16
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"Mediation 17"- No man is an:
island
17
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"Mediation 17"- The author sees \________ as a treasure
affliction
18
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"Mediation 17"- Because Donne is involved in mankind
19
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"Dr King's Nobel Prize Speech"- According to Dr King
the nation will survive provided that we eliminate:
20
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"Dr King's Nobel Prize Speech"- Not mentioned by Dr King as one of the three problems society faces:
disease
21
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"Dr King's Nobel Prize Speech"- In order to feed the hungry
we must have the:
22
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"To the Virgins
to make much of time"- Rosebuds most likely mean:
23
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"To the Virgins
to make much of time"- The sun is described as:
24
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"To the Virgins
to make much of time"- According to the speaker
25
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"To the Virgins
to make much of time"- What does for having lost but once your prime/ you may forever tarry most likely mean?
26
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"To his coy mistress"- The speaker considers the woman's coyness a:
crime
27
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"To his coy mistress"- A symbol of impending death to the speaker is:
time's winged chariot
28
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"To his coy mistress"- According to the speaker
he would love her ten years before:
29
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"Sonnet 116"- True or False: According to the speaker
it is justifiable to stop loving a person if he or she changes
30
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"Sonnet 116"- True or False: Love is an ever fixed mark that guides us safely through a storm
True
31
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"A modest proposal"- The essay is set in:
Ireland
32
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"A modest proposal"- The number of children who follow the beggar woman:
three to six
33
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"A modest proposal"- Children are to be sold at \_______ year(s) old
one
34
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"A modest proposal"- An (A) \_______ gave him the idea to slaughter and to eat children
American
35
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"A modest proposal"- The derogatory name given to Catholics by the speaker
Papists
36
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"A modest proposal"- To care for children in their 1st year
a family must have \______ shillings
37
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"A modest proposal"- Prior to the proposal
the speaker thinks that infants grow only to:
38
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"A modest proposal"- Anyone who could make these children useful members of the commonwealth:
will have his or her likeness made into a statue
39
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"A modest proposal"- According to the speaker
a well nourished child at 1 year old will weigh \_________ pounds
40
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"A modest proposal"- According to a \____________ physician
there are more children born nine months after Lent than at any other season
41
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"A modest proposal"- According to the speaker
the mother will have \___________ shillings net profit after selling her child:
42
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"A modest proposal"- This is not one of the author's six advantages mentioned by the speaker:
more people will buy Irish goods
43
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"A modest proposal"- A story that uses ridicule to draw attention to a problematic issue is a(an)
Satire
44
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The moping \_______ does to the moon complain
owl
45
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The poem takes place at:
dusk
46
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The speaker compares the dead's unknown lives to that of a beautiful \_________
desert
47
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- Historical figures mentioned in the poem are:
Milton
48
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The muse
or the inscriber of tombstones
49
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The poem begins with a sense of:
ending
50
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- According to the speaker
the paths of glory lead but to the \__________
51
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- He believes that ambition and grandeur should not \______________ the poor's useful toil
mock
52
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- The man who notices that the poet is missing is:
the hoary headed swain
53
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- In the end
the speaker includes \_________ epitaph
54
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"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"- This poem is an elegy for \____________ people
poor
55
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"Essay on Man"- The speaker believed that the proper study of mankind is:
man
56
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"Essay on Man"- The speaker places the man on an:
isthmus
57
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"A Journal of the Plague Year"- The narrator views the pit out of a sense of:
curiosity
58
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"A Journal of the Plague Year"- The \_________ tells the narrator that the pit is a "speaking site"
sexton
59
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"A Journal of the Plague Year"- The narrator wishes to view the pit at night because:
the bodies are covered during the day
60
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Correct Use of Modifiers- This outfit looks (bad
badly) on me.
61
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Correct Use of Modifiers- I played (good
well) today.
62
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Correct Use of Modifiers- I did (good
well) on my test today.
63
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Correct Use of Modifiers- My bike is shinier than (any
any other) bike in the park
64
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Correct Use of Modifiers- Of the two boys
Frank is (taller
65
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Correct Use of Modifiers- Choose the (funniest
most funniest) story out over several
66
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Correct Use of Modifiers- He has a (unique
most unique) perspective.
67
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Correct Use of Modifiers- I am not feeling (good
well)
68
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I need to go home
well
69
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Correct Use of Modifiers- This new painting is (real
really) nice.
70
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Correct Use of Modifiers- Go (slow
slowly) in this area
71
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Correct Use of Modifiers- The smaller kitten is the (cute
cutest) one.
72
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"Kubla Khan"- The name of Kubla's pleasure dome is:
Xanadu
73
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"Kubla Khan"- The sacred river is called:
Alph
74
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"Kubla Khan"- The damsel plays a:
dulcimer
75
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"Kubla Khan"- She is an Ethiopian
or a/an \__________ maid
76
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"Kubla Khan"- The poem reveals at the end that the speaker craves:
attention
77
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"She walks in beauty"- She walks in beauty
like the \__________
78
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"She walks in beauty"- The girl's hair is \___________
black
79
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"She walks in beauty"- The girl is the physical manifestation of:
virtue
80
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"Ozymandias"- The titular character is based on:
Ramses II
81
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"Ozymandias"- The speaker met a traveler from an \_____________ land
antique
82
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"Ozymandias"- The poem reminds us that power is:
temporary or fleeting
83
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"When I have fears that I may cease to be"- The speaker uses the metaphor of \__________ to compare his writing
farming
84
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"When I have fears that I may cease to be"- He fears that he will not relish in the faery power of \_________ love
unreflecting
85
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"When I have fears that I may cease to be"- The speaker believes that death \__________ creativity
ends or cuts off
86
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- It seems that there is a \__________ occurring
wedding
87
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- The urn is best described as:
a retainer of ashes
88
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- The people depicted on the urn should be happy
for they remain "forever...
89
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- The scene takes place in/at:
the woods
90
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- The speaker tells us that hears melodies are sweet
but unheard melodies are...
91
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"Ode on a Grecian Urn"- According to the speaker
what is all we need to know
92
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"My heart leaps up"- The speaker's heart leaps up when:
he sees a rainbow
93
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"My heart leaps up"- The child is the father of a man is an example of:
paradox
94
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"My heart leaps up"- The speaker expresses his holiness through this expression:
bound each to each by natural piety
95
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"It is a beauteous evening"- The speaker walk with :
his daughter
96
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"It is a beauteous evening"- The speaker combines nature and the divinity through:
the sound of thunder
97
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"It is a beauteous evening"- This poem is a:
sonnet
98
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"It is a beauteous evening"- This phrase associates his companion with being in God's presence
always:
99
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"The world is too much with us"- The author means the \____________ world
material
100
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"The world is too much with us"- A sordid boon is best described as:
selfish gift
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