1. In what time did Romanticism originate?

 

a) around the 19th C. in Eastern Europe

b) around the 19th c during the Industrial Revolution

c) around the 18th c. in Russia

d) around the 18th C. in Western Europe

 

2. Where was originated romanticism?

 

a) in the United States of America

b) in Western Europe

c) in Russia

d) in the Scandinavian lands

 

 

3. What are the main characteristics of the Romanticism?

 

a) The stress of emotion and aesthetic experience

b) The nature is the most important in this experience

c) The Romantic new place emphasises in rational thinking

d) Emotion such a delight of horror and surprise in a natural experience

 

 

4. What of these statements about Romanticism are corrects:

 

a) William Blake is the most successful poet of the Romanticism

b) Romanticism is a way of poetry

c) Romanticism started in 19th century

d) Romantic poets focus their attention only in nature, their feelings and emotions

 

 

5. The period from September 1818 to September 1819 is often referred to among Keats scholars as the…

 

a) Great Year and Living Year

b) Great Year

c) Living Year

d) Any of the three answers are correct

 

 

6. Which is the most radical opposite of romanticism?

 

a) Bohemianism

b) Nationalism

c) Classicism

d) Expressionism

 

 

 

 

7.  Which themes do we found in Romantic literature?

 

a) The criticism of the past, emphasis on women and children, and respect for nature

b) The respect of nature

c) The most important theme was to criticism what they see

d) There was not a specific theme

 

 

8. Is the same talk about Romanticism and Neo-romanticism?

 

a) No, because the neo-romantic adds feeling and internal observation whereas the romantic was more external

b) Yes, they were from the same time

c) No, but because they are from different period of time

d) Yes, they had the same ideas

 

 

9. Which political philosophy emerged because of romanticism?

 

a) Anarchism

b) Capitalism

c) Nationalism

d) Communism

 

 

10. Romanticism trend is available to:

 

a) Music

b) Literature and Music

c) Literature, Music, Paint and Sculpture and Architecture

d) All of these and also photography

 

 

11. When was the term Romanticism applied to music?

 

a) It has come to mean the period roughly from the 1820s until 1918

b) It was applied in 1810

c) It was applied from the 1817s until 1821

d) It was applied in the 20th century

 

 

12. Who is the most extreme example of the Romantic sensibility in Britain?

 

a) William Blake

b) William Wordsworth

c) Walter Scott

d) Stendhal

 

 

 

13. Blake is famous by writing…

 

a) Theatre works

b) Journals and essays about human behaviour

c) Novels and short stories

d) Poetry

 

 

14. Who did become the nucleus of a circle of ex-patriot writers that became known as the “Satanic school” because of their defiance of English social and religious conventions and promotion of radical ideas in their works?

 

a) Shelly and Keats

b) Shelley and Byron

c) Keats and Byron

d) Coleridge and Wordsworth

 

 

15. What is the name of the pattern related to the variation of the duration of sounds or other events over time?

 

a) Rhyme

c) Rhythm

c) Metre

d) Foot

 

 

16. What represent “the little boy”?

 

a) Only the main character of the poem

b) A little black poor boy

c) The “poetic I”

d) The black’s generation

 

 

17. With the help of what author did Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote Lyrical Ballads?

 

a) William Wordsworth

b) William Blake

c) John Keats

d) George Gordon Byron

 

 

18.- Who described poetry as “ The spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling arising” form “emotion recollected in tranquillity”?

 

a) William Wordsworth

b) William Blake

c) George Gordon Byron

d) John Keats

19. Which poets left England in 1816 and never return?

 

a) Lord Byron

b) Coleridge

c) Wordsworth

d) Blake

 

 

20. A sonnet is a poem of _ lines following a set rhyme scheme and logical structure:

 

a) 8

b) 10

c) 12

d) 14

 

 

21. What is a rhyme?

 

a) It is the whole repetition of the final word of each verse in a poem 

b) It is a topic in linguistics

c) It is a repetition of identical or similar sounds in two or more different words and is most often used in poetry. It refers to the repetition of sounds at the end of rhyme words

d) It is the repetition of vowel sounds within a short passage of verse or prose

 

 

22. What is the name of the repetition of vowel sounds within a short passage of verse or prose?

 

a) Alliteration

b) A rhyme scheme

c) Half rhyme

d) Tropes

 

 

23. What do categories of rhyme include?

 

a) Tall rhyme, masculine and feminine rhyme, sight, consonance, half rhyme, assonance b) Tall rhyme, half rhyme

c) Sight, consonance, assonance

d) Masculine and feminine rhyme

 

 

24. What is known as ‘enclosed rhyme’?

 

a) The alternating a-b rhyming scheme

b) An a-b-b-a quatrain

c)  a-b-a/ b-c-b/ c-d-c… The first and third lines rhyme, and the second line rhyming with the first and third lines of the next stanza in a chain rhyme

d) An a-a-b-a rhyme scheme

 

25. The omission of conjunctions between related clauses refers to:

 

a) Pleonasm

b) Anaphora

c) Ellipsis

d) Asyndeton