Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Test I. IDENTIFICATION
1. A fictional narrative that deals with a single incident that can be read at one setting.
2. It is the creation of the writer’s imagination, or simply an imagined story.
3. Refers to a representation of a human being or any other creature in the course of the story.
4. It is a discrepancy between expectation and reality.
5. Refers to the series or sequence of events that give the story its meaning and effect.
6. An extended fictitious prose narrative which consists of 50,000 words or more and putting
emphasis on exciting events designed to entertain readers.
7. Defined as the eyes and mind through which the reader views the unfolding of events.
8. Types of narrative prose literature found in the oral traditions of the world.
9. Type of characters that undergoes permanent change in aspect of his/her personality or
outlook.
10. A character who comes to a bad end as a result of his own behaviour, usually caused by
personality disorder.
11. It is consisting of a series of loosely related incidents, usually of chapter length tied together
by a common theme and/or characters.
12. It is a problem or obstacle encountered by the character within the story.
13. It is made up of Geographical location, its typography, scenery, physical arrangements, the
occupation and the daily living of the characters, the time and period in which the actions
take place.
14. Type of irony which the character is unaware of crucial information already revealed to the
audience.
15. Type of plot that the story is unfolds in chronological manner.
16. The meaning or concept left to the readers after reading a piece of fiction.
17. Type of irony that refers to a situation features a discrepancy between what is expected and
what is being actualized.
18. It is used when narrator is a character of the story.
19. The narrator refers the reader as "YOU" making the reader feel as if he/she is a character or
part within a story.
20. The narrator relates events, but is not one of the characters.
21. Same kind of person at the end of the story as he/she was the beginning.
22. A character in a story who deceives, frustrates or works against the main character.
23. Main character in a novel, play or in a story.
24. This is when a person states one thing while meaning another.
25. It is usually depicting and unifies the central topic of the story.