It is a story without an author that is passed along and is usually intended to teach a lesson, or something that is untrue. The stories the Ancient Greeks told to explain the sun and the Earth are an example of:
a. Myth
b. Legend
c. Folktale
a. Myth
These are usually very old stories with little or no evidence to prove them. These are often passed on by word-of-mouth. They are very similar to myths. King Arthur and Robin hood are examples of this.
a. Myth
b.Legend
c. Folktale
b.Legend
It is a characteristically anonymous, timeless, and placeless tale circulated orally among a people.
a. Myth
b. Legend
c. Folktale
c. Folktale
It is a story featuring a protagonist (often an anthropomorphized animal) who has magical powers and who is characterized as a compendium of opposites.
a. Legend
b. Folktale
c. Trickster Tale
c. Trickster Tale
It is a pithy saying or remark expressing an idea in a clever and amusing way.
a. Epigram
b. Proverb
c. Riddles
a. Epigram
It is a short pithy saying in general use, stating a general truth or piece of advice.
a. Epigram
b. Proverb
c. Riddles
b. Proverb
This is a question or statement intentionally phrased so as to require ingenuity in ascertaining its answer or meaning, typically presented as a game.
a. Epigram
b. Proverb
c. Riddles
c. Riddles
It is a language that is native to a region and spoken by indigenous people.
a. Universal Language
b. Indigenous language
c. Language Ideology
b. Indigenous language
A member of a Semitic people inhabiting ancient Phoenicia and its colonies.
a. Semitican
b. Colonians
c. Phonecians
c. Phonecians
It is a material similar to thick paper that was used in ancient times as a writing surface.
a. Ancient Paper
b. Wood Blocks
c. Papyrus
c. Papyrus
It is a form of poetry which was also popular among Somali Shaykhs who produced several thousand poems in praise of the Prophet Mohammad.
a. Swahili
b. Qur’an
c. Qasida
c. Qasida
This literature has historically been very politicized. After the Italian defeat in World War II, the focus of this literature shifted to the fight for independence.
a. Libyan literature
b. Nigerian literature
c. Algerian literature
a. Libyan literature
Famous Nigerian writer from Nigeria who wrote, “The Telephone Conversation.”
a. Olumbre Bassir
b. Wole Soyinka
c. Khaled Mattawa
b. Wole Soyinka
Country which was a refuge and artistic center for both French and Arabic writers.
a. Ghana
b. Kenya
c. Morocco
c. Morocco
Zoco Chico is one of his literary texts.
a. Mohamed Choukri
b. Mohamed Zafzad
c. Mohamed Ali
a. Mohamed Choukri
He is a famous writer from Kenya who wrote, “A Place to Feel at Home.”
a. Bethwell Allan Ogot
b. Ngugi wa Thiong'o
c. Margaret Ogola
a. Bethwell Allan Ogot
Famous writer in Somalia who wrote, “El-Aaleg (The Leech).”
a. Marie Louise Taos Amrouche
b. Abdelkader Alloula
c. Tahar Djaout
b. Abdelkader Alloula
This country has been influenced by many cultures including the ancient Romans, Arabs, French, and Spanish, as well as the indigenous people.
a. Nigeria
b. Libya
c. Algeria
c. Algeria
Which literature manifests the struggle of a people whose country is undergoing the painful process of transformation from colonial through neo-colonial to a wholly self-determining nation.
a. Nigerian literature
b. Libyan literature
c. Algerian literature
a. Nigerian literature
Their literature was in Swahili and later in English.
a. Kenya
b. Morocco
c. Libya
a. Kenya
One of the literary pieces of Khaled Mattawa.
a. In the Country of Men
b. Zodiac of Echos
c. L'invention du Desert
b. Zodiac of Echos
Drama and Storytelling are widely enjoyed and are very popular in this country.
a. Kenya
b. Ghana
c. Morocco
b. Ghana
All was a famous writer in Ghana EXCEPT:
a. Kofi Anyidoho
b. Ama Ata Aidoo
c. Wole Soyinka
c. Wole Soyinka
All was a famous writer in Nigeria EXCEPT:
a.Olumbre Bassir
b. Wole Soyinka
c. Kofi Anyidoho
c. Kofi Anyidoho
He is the author of “The Woman and the Rose.”
a. Mohamed Choukri
b. Mohamed Zafzad
c. Mohamed Ali
b. Mohamed Zafzad