Literature Past Questions And Answers

Note: You Can Select Post UTME Schools Name Below The Exam Year.
2401

This question is based on General Literary Principles

'Whereat: with blade, with bloody blameful blade.

He bravely broached his boiling bloody best'.

The dominant figure of speech in the lines above is

  • A. simile
  • B. alliteration
  • C. assonance
  • D. repetition
View Discussion (0)JAMB 1999
2402

African Prose

AMMA DARKO: Faceless

Examine the significance of Vickoe and Kabria's visit to the police station.

View Discussion (0)WAEC 2016 THEORY
2403

Read the poem below and answer questions 26 to 30.

We wear the mask that grins and lies,

It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,

This debt we pay to human guile;

With torn and bleeding hearts we smile

And mouths with myriad subtleties,

Why should the world be over-wise,

In counting all our tears and sighs?

Nay, let them only see us, while

We wear the mask.

We smile but O great god, our cries

To thee from tortured souls arise

We sing, but oh the clay is vile

Beneath our feet and long the mile,

But let the world dream otherwise,

We wear the mask!

We wear the mask that grins and lies illustrate

  • A. irony
  • B. personification
  • C. synecdoche
  • D. alliteration
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2021 OBJ
2404

This question is based on Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel.

  • The central theme of the play is the A. ills of modern days
  • B. clash between tradition and modernity
  • C. problem of courtship
  • D. conflict between the old and the young
View Discussion (0)JAMB 1990
2405

This question is based on S.I. Osammor's The Triumph of the Water Lily.

The language of the novel is generally

  • A. entertaining
  • B. educative
  • C. romantic
  • D. reportive
View Discussion (0)JAMB 2003
2406

Read the extract and answer questions

If after every tempest come such calms.

May the winds blow till they have wakened death,

And let the labouring bark climb hills of seas

Olympus-high, and duck again as low

As hell's from heaven. If it were now to die,

'T were now to be most happy: for I fear

My soul hath her content so absolute

That not another comfort like to this

Succeeds in unknown fate.

(Act II, Scene One, lines 179 - 187) 46.

The speaker is ________

  • A. Brabantio
  • B. Othello
  • C. Duke
  • D. Montano
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2019 OBJ
2407

Read the extract below and answer the question

A : Will you stay no longer nor will you not that I go with you?

B : By your patience, no. My stars shine darkly over me; the Malignancy of my fate might, perhaps, distemper yours; therefore I shall crave of you your leave that I may bear my evils alone

(Act II Scene 1)

Speaker B is

  • A. grateful
  • B. happy
  • C. angry
  • D. sad
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2000 OBJ
2408

'The fire gnawed ceaselessly at the bark of the tree'' illustrates

  • A. personification
  • B. eithet
  • C. allusion
  • D. paradox
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2013 OBJ
2409

Read the extract below and answer the question

....very vilely in the morning when he is sober, and most vilely

in the afternoon when he is drunk. When he is best he is a little

worse than a man, and when he is worst he is a little better than a beast

(Act 1 sc ll)

The dominant literary device used in the extract is

  • A. simile B. paradox
  • B. paradox
  • C. repetition
  • D. oxymoron
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2002 OBJ
2410

A Midsummer Night's Read the extract below and answer question

X: You do impeach your modesty too much,

To leave the city and commit yourself

Into the hands of one that loves you not;

To trust the opportunity of night

And the ill counsel of a desert place

Y: With the rich worth of your virginity.

Your virtue is my privilege: for that

it is not night when I do see your face,

Therefore I think I am not in the night;

Speaker X sees Speaker Y

  • A. as a pretender
  • B. as a past lover
  • C. for the first time
  • D. for the last time
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2021 OBJ