Poetry Pre-Assessment

Poetry Pre-Assessment

Assessment

Quiz

English

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

CCSS
RL.9-10.10, RL.11-12.3, RI.11-12.4

+21

Standards-aligned

Used 3+ times

FREE Resource

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25 questions

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1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

1. The following lines are an example of what sound device? "Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing / Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before." from "The Raven" by Edgar Allen Poe

Alliteration

Onomatopoeia

Imagery

Repetition

Tags

CCSS.RL.11-12.10

CCSS.RL.8.10

CCSS.RL.8.5

CCSS.RL.9-10.10

CCSS.RL.9-10.9

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

2. "Because I could not stop for Death-- / He kindly stopped for me."  What figure of speech does Emily Dickinson, the poet, use in the aforementioned lines?

Understatement
Simile
Personification
Hyperbole

Tags

CCSS.RL.11-12.8

CCSS.RL.8.10

CCSS.RL.8.5

CCSS.RL.9-10.10

CCSS.RL.9-10.9

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

The following lines are an example of what sound device? “Poetry is old, ancient, goes back far. It is among the oldest of living things. So old it is that no man knows how and why the first poems came.”

Onotamopoeia

Consonance, Assonance

Repetition

Metaphor

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

The following lines are an example of what figure of speech?  "I’ll love you, dear, I’ll love you / Till China and Africa meet, / And the river jumps over the mountain / And the salmon sing in the street." from W. H. Auden's "As I Walked Out One Evening"  

Aphorism
Allusion
Alliteration
Hyperbole

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Poetry that does not follow a specific form nor a consistent rhythmic structure or pattern is known as ______ poetry.

good
free verse
closed verse
rhyming poetry

Tags

CCSS.RL.11-12.11

CCSS.RL.8.10

CCSS.RL.8.5

CCSS.RL.9-10.10

CCSS.RL.9-10.9

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Essentially a reference to something else, this literary device intentionally relies on the reader's understanding of history and/or literature. An example is the line "Night's Plutonian Shore" from Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven," with Plutonian being a reference to the Roman God of the Underworld, Plato. Note that Hades is the Greek equivalent to the Roman Pluto.

Personification

Irony

Idiom

Allusion

Tags

CCSS.RL.11-12.3

CCSS.RL.6.3

CCSS.RL.7.3

CCSS.RL.8.3

CCSS.RL.9-10.3

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

A word that sounds like what it means. Examples include buzz, splash, thump.

Onomatopoeia

Metaphor

Consonance

Verse

Tags

CCSS.RL.11-12.3

CCSS.RL.6.3

CCSS.RL.7.3

CCSS.RL.8.3

CCSS.RL.9-10.3

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