Literature in English JAMB, WAEC, NECO AND NABTEB Official Past Questions

22

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
Periphrasis in poetic diction is marked by

  • A. circumlocution
  • B. irony
  • C. proverb
  • D. parable
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23

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
Point of denouement in a literary work is the

  • A. point at which the major character is shown in his true colours
  • B. point of disagreement in a narrative
  • C. point of the resolution of the puzzling issues
  • D. cathartic point in a tragedy
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24

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
A deliberate imitation of a literary style with the intention to ridicule is

  • A. paradox
  • B. prosody
  • C. pun
  • D. parody
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25

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
In a narration, the first person is

  • A. the author
  • B. a participant
  • C. the publisher
  • D. an observer
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26

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
The exclusive right given to authors to protect their works from unlawful production is

  • A. a copyright
  • B. an authority to write
  • C. an author's right
  • D. a constitional provision
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27

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
The setting in pastoral poetry is usually

  • A. oceanic
  • B. urban
  • C. encumenical
  • D. idyllic
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28

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
For a play to be successful on stage, it must not be short of

  • A. audiences
  • B. speeches
  • C. actions
  • D. characters
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29

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
The poetic device that forcefully brings together two seemingly unrelated ideas or concepts is

  • A. conceit
  • B. contrast
  • C. couplet
  • D. diatribe
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30

This question is based on General Literary Appreciation
A dramatic composition or musical play in which many or all the words are sung is called

  • A. an oratorio
  • B. a motet
  • C. an opera
  • D. a concert
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31

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
Be him English
Be him African
Be him Nigerian

The lines above are an example of

  • A. epitaph
  • B. anaphora
  • C. tautology
  • D. epigram
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32

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
‘I am alone
And the murmur of my lips
Carry song and tears homewards
From a plain away from home

Okogbule Wonodi: Lament for Shola
The poet-persona here expresses a feeling of

  • A. elation
  • B. anger
  • C. nostaglgia
  • D. sorrow
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33

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
‘Senhor Jose got cold during the night. After having uttered those redundant useless words, here she is, he wasn’t sure what else he should do. It was true that, after long and arduous labours, he had managed, at last to find the unknown woman, or rather, the place where she lay, a good six feet beneath an earth that still sustained him’
Jose Saramago: All the Names
What happens to the unknown woman in the passage above?

  • A. she runs away
  • B. she is awake
  • C. she falls asleep
  • D. she is dead
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34

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
He was an odd-looking duck, Inman was.
He was in his mid-fifties but still had a head of thick black hair, which began low on his forehead and was slicked back over his small round.
He seemed to be made of a series of balls piled one atop the other.

Tom Wolfe: A Man in Full
The author’s attitude to inman in the passage above is one of

  • A. ridicule
  • B. praise
  • C. hatred
  • D. admiration
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35

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
‘Since you left here my mind longs after there Now in the dark I grope Keenly striving to cope’
Gbemisola Adeoti: Absence
The dominant technique in the lines above is

  • A. irony
  • B. rhyme
  • C. alliteration
  • D. metaphor
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36

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
MR.BOROFO: I heartily curse the day my wife decided to go to
England. Ever since then,I have had nothing but we must do this because it is done in England, we mustn’t do that, because it is not done by English people and so on ad nauseam.
The subject matter of the passage above is the

  • A. uncritical acceptance of European values
  • B. woes of English marriage
  • C. adventures in England
  • D. intransigence of an African wife
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37

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
‘My brother you flash your teeth in response to every hypocrisy.
My brother with gold-rimmed glasses You give your master a blue-eyed faithful look.
My poor brother in immaculate evening dress
Screaming and whispering and pleading in the parlours of condescension’.
Diop: The Renegade
The poet’s attitude here is

  • A. paradoxical
  • B. envious
  • C. ironical
  • D. sarcastic
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38

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
The guilty are too well-fed to pass through the needle’s eye of our scorn the noose of public contempt hangs idle at the market place’
Odia Ofeimun: The Poet Lied and other poems The allusion in the excerpt above is

  • A. mythical
  • B. biblical
  • C. historical
  • D. classical
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39

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
This thing you are doing is too heavy for you’ he said . I went to school only a little, but I have killed many many more years in this world than you have,’
Gabriel Okara: The Voice
it can be inferred from the passage above that the

  • A. listener is a porter
  • B. listener is wise
  • C. speaker is a murderer
  • D. speaker is more experienced
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40

This question is based on Literary Appreciation
‘Everywhere now, freedom is on the loose And in its name, men and women slaughter One another with terrible abandon Carnage has become the means of Setting simple scores with our friends’
Okinba Launko: Pain Remembers, Love Rekindles
The dominant rhetorical device in the poem above is

  • A. innuendo
  • B. assonance
  • C. oxymoron
  • D. limerick
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41

This question is based on selected poems from Ker, D, et al (eds.): New Poetry from Africa; Syinka, W. (ed.): Poems of Black African; Senanu, K.E. and Vincent, T. (eds.): A Selection of African Poetry; Umukoro, M. et al (eds.): Exam Focus: Literature-in-Enghish; Eruvbetine, A. E. et al (eds.): Longman Examination Guides and Nwoga, D. I. (ed.)west African Verse.
In John Donne’s Death, be not Proud, the poet believes that death is

  • A. immortal
  • B. mighty
  • C. pleasurable
  • D. dreaful
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42

This question is based on selected poems from Ker, D, et al (eds.): New Poetry from Africa; Syinka, W. (ed.): Poems of Black African; Senanu, K.E. and Vincent, T. (eds.): A Selection of African Poetry; Umukoro, M. et al (eds.): Exam Focus: Literature-in-Enghish; Eruvbetine, A. E. et al (eds.): Longman Examination Guides and Nwoga, D. I. (ed.)west African Verse.
Mohan Singh’s A Village girl centers on

  • A. the description of a village girl
  • B. beauty and its appreciation
  • C. man in nature
  • D. the elegance of a girl
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