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

3739

The epilogue in a play refers to the

  • A. conflict in the play
  • B. tail-piece
  • C. opening chorus
  • D. dramatic action.
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3740

When the speech is written so as to be understood in one way by a certain character, while the audience or another character understands it to have some secret and special meaning, the literary device used in this context is called

  • A. dramatic irony
  • B. paradox
  • C. allusion
  • D. hyperbole.
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3741

‘No; This my hand will rather
The multitudinous seas incarnadine
Making the green and red .’
In the above lines the figure of speech used is

  • A. metaphor
  • B. simile
  • C. hyperbole
  • D. paradox
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3742

Tunde’s long and vigorous speech was followed by a deafening silence.
The phrase deafening silence is used as a figure of speech called

  • A. oxymoron
  • B. metaphor
  • C. simile
  • D. hyperbole.
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3743

The theme of Gabriel Okara’s ‘piano and Drums’ is usually summed up in the phrase

  • A. clash of cultures
  • B. primal youth of the African
  • C. beauty of the Concerto
  • D. the decay of African Civilization.
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3744

The gurgling drums
Echo the stars
The forest howls
And between the tress
The dark sun appears.
The dominant figure of speech in the above lines from Lenrie Peter’s ‘We Have Come Home’ is

  • A. synecdoche
  • B. simile
  • C. metaphor
  • D. personification.
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3745

Much of the poetic effect of Birago Diop’s ‘Viaticum’ is gained by the poet’s use of

  • A. repetition of symbolic references
  • B. rhetorical questions
  • C. exaggeration
  • D. flowering language.
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3746

‘The Vultures built in the shadow of their talons
The blood-stained monument of tutelage.’
The image used in the above lines associates the civilizing missions with

  • A. redemption from ignorance
  • B. violence and oppression
  • C. conversion from paganism
  • D. the building of beautiful edifices.
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3747

In the poem ‘The Vultures’, David Diop suggests that the Christians missionaries were agents of

  • A. agrarian revolution
  • B. baptism
  • C. justics
  • D. colonialism.
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3748

Which of the following statement is NOT true of the two ‘Abiku’ poems by J.P Clark and Wole Soyinka?

  • A. in each of the two poems, the voice of the Abiku is heard
  • B. while the tone of Clark's poem is conciliatory, that of Soyinka is defiant
  • C. it would appear that making body marks on the two Abiku has not served the customary purpose of stopping them from coming again
  • D. as the two poet portray them, Clark's Abiku can choose to stay or not to stay, but Soyinka's Abiku cannot.
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3749

The tone of Wole Soyinka’s ‘Abiku is

  • A. arrogant and cynical
  • B. mysterious and cunning
  • C. understanding but cynical
  • D. kind and thoughtful.
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3750

From the poem itself, it is easy to tell that J.P. Clark’s Abiku’ is set in

  • A. ancient times
  • B. a hut in a riverine village
  • C. a modern city by the sea
  • D. the only mansion in the village.
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3751

The impression created of the rain in J.P. Clark’s ‘Night Rain’ is that of

  • A. an implacable destructive force
  • B. an invading but paradoxically welcome force
  • C. a welcome and benevolent force
  • D. a sinister and ominous force.
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3752

The dominant mood in J.P. Clark’s ‘Night Rain’ is that of

  • A. indignation
  • B. sorrow
  • C. joy
  • D. optimism.
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3753
From the novel; Great Expectation

In Great Expectations, Pip’s reaction to the news that his fortune had been bestowed on him by Magwitch was

  • A. a sense of disillusionment
  • B. a feeling of utter shame
  • C. anger of disgust
  • D. one of excitement.
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3754
From the novel; Great Expectation

When Mr. Jagger”s told Joe Gargery to ”bear in mind, that Brag is a good dog, but Holdfast is a better”, what he meant was that

  • A. Holdfast was a better dog when compared to Brag
  • B. it was better to hold fast on one''s beliefs than to brag about them
  • C. a faithful, steadfast dog was better than a dog that gives one cause to bragof its beauty
  • D. Joe Gargery should keep his mouth shut.
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3755
From the novel; Great Expectation

Joe Gargery is important in Great Expectations mainly because he

  • A. is used as a foil to Pip
  • B. provides the comedy in the story
  • C. helped to bring Pip up by hand
  • D. nursed Pip when he was sick in London.
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3756
From the novel; Great Expectation

The effect of Pip’s association with the inmates of Satis house was made to make him

  • A. realize that he was an orphan
  • B. despair of even being a gentle man
  • C. aspire to improve his education and make himself less common
  • D. love Biddy more ardently.
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3757
From the novel; Great Expectation

The protagonist of Charles Dicken’s Great Expectations is

  • A. Drummle
  • B. Magwitch
  • C. Miss Havishman
  • D. Pip.
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3758
From the novel; Mission to Kala

From Madza’s behavior after his return to Kala
it can be deduced that the most important lesson he learned from his sojourn in Kala is that

  • A. the secret of happiness is to be found among unsophisticated Africans
  • B. every man is free to set his own goals and chart his own course in life
  • C. formal education is the ideal way to true wisdom
  • D. it is highly rewarding to abide scrupulously by the mores of one's own community.
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3759
From the novel; Mission to Kala

‘Why the hell can’t some of you caught him for me
Are you going to let a boy make a public laughing stock of his own father?
The speaker of these words is the father of

  • A. Bikokolo
  • B. Niam
  • C. Albert
  • D. Medza.
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