Literature Past Questions And Answers

Note: You Can Select Post UTME Schools Name Below The Exam Year.
891

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: Hamlet

Read the extract and answer the question

Think it no more:

For nature, crescent, does not grow alone

Inthews and bulk, as this temple waxes,

The inward service of the mind and soul

Grows wide withal. Perhaps he loves you now.

And now no soil or cantle doth besmirch

The virtue of his will

(Act One, Scene 111, Lines 10 - 16)

The speaker is

  • A. happy
  • B. confused
  • C. excited
  • D. anxious
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2009 OBJ
892

Read the extract below and answer the question

As much as I deserve: why, that's the lady

I do in birth deserve her, and in fortunes

In graces, and in qualities of breeding

But more than these, in love I do deserves

(Act 11, sc VII)

After the speech, the speaker

  • A. marries his lover
  • B. betrays his emotions
  • C. fails in his venture
  • D. breaks the engagement
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2003 OBJ
893

According to Peter's The Panic of Growing Older at twenty a man is

  • A. poor
  • B. religious
  • C. hopeful
  • D. frustrated
View Discussion (0)JAMB 2016
894

This question is based on William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.

The news of Juliet's death is broken to Romeo in Mantua by

  • A. Balthasar
  • B. Boy C
  • C. Friar John
  • D. Friar Lawrence
View Discussion (0)JAMB 2011
895

In a novel, the antagonist is

  • A. a fully developed character
  • B. a flat character
  • C. the main female character
  • D. the archrival of the hero
View Discussion (0)WAEC 1998 OBJ
896

This question is based on General Literary Principles.

A formal dignified speech or writing praising a person or a thing for past or present deeds is

  • A. eulogy
  • B. anthology
  • C. lampoon
  • D. premiere
View Discussion (0)JAMB 2010
897

This question is based on Ferdinand Oyono's. The old Man and the Medal.

The disagreement between Mvondo and Nti centres on the latter's claim to have

  • A. eaten the entire entrails of sheep
  • B. eaten more than his share of the food
  • C. been in a whiteman's office
  • D. assisted Meka in getting the medal
View Discussion (0)JAMB 2010
898

The concluding part of a play where the conflict is resolved is the

  • A. resolution
  • B. enjambment
  • C. denouement
  • D. climax
View Discussion (0)WAEC 2008 OBJ
899

NON AFRICAN PROSE

ERNEST HEMINGWAY: The Old Man and the Sea

Comment on the narrative techniques used in the novel.

View Discussion (0)WAEC 2014 THEORY
900

This question is based on Literary Principles.

'The strong desire he felt for her fade away. As he had done the previous night, he tried desperately to excite himself mentally. Not a nerve in his body responded. He felt ill. He perspired. He, the stallion who usually flung himself at women, was like pulp.' Sembane Ousmane, 'Xala'

The terseness of the prose above is employed to

  • A. capture a climax
  • B. depict tension
  • C. condemn the man
  • D. sympathize with the girl
View Discussion (0)JAMB 1998