Poetry
Grammar, Punctuation, and Parts of Speech
Fences
Catcher in the Rye
Literary Techniques
100

This poem concludes with the question, "What did I know, what did I know/ of love's austere and lonely offices?"

What is "Those Winter Sundays?"

100

This is a specific kind of a run-on sentence in which two independent clauses are joined by only a comma instead of a coordinating conjunction and a comma.

What is a comma splice?

100

This author of Fences wrote one play for each decade of the 20th century, featuring Black American life in Pittsburg. 

Who was August Wilson?

100

This author of Catcher in the Rye refused to sell rights to the novel so that it could be made into a movie. 

Who is J. D. Salinger?

100

Examples of this poetic technique—repetition of initial consonant sounds— can be found in Robert Frost's poem "The Gift Outright" in the lines, "Something we were withholding made us weak" and "forthwith found salvation in surrender."

What is alliteration?

200
This reclusive poet, who lived in Amherst, MA, wrote nearly 1800 poems, most of which were published only after her death. 

Who is Emily Dickinson?

200

This part of speech modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb.

What is an adverb?


200

When Troy says he was wrestling death for three days, Rose clarifies that he was really sick with this ailment. 

What is pneumonia?

200

Holden Caulfield is expelled from this Pennsylvania prep school at the beginning of the novel.

What is Pencey Prep?

200

This device hints at a well-known person, event, or text without directly explaining it, assuming the reader will recognize the reference.

What is an allusion?

300

This poet and professor of English at Wellesley College wrote the words to the patriotic hymn "America the Beautiful."

Who is Katherine Lee Bates?

300
This punctuation mark can be used to join two independent clauses that are closely related in subject. 

What is a semicolon?

300

This character believes he can help open the gates of heaven with his trumpet.

Who is Gabe?

300
This poet wrote the poem "Through the Rye," a song version of which Holden hears a little boy singing. 

Who is Robert Burns?

300

This device places contradictory terms side by side, such as “deafening silence,” to reveal a deeper truth.

What is oxymoron?

400

Robert Frost was the first poet to be asked to write and deliver a poem for a presidential inauguration, but on inauguration day for this president in 1961, the sun was too bright for the 86 year old poet to see the words on the page, so he recited a poem from memory instead.

Who was Robert F. Kennedy?

400

This punctuation mark is used to show possession or to demonstrate that letter(s) have been omitted in a contraction.

What is an apostrophe?

400

Troy describes Death in these baseball terms.

What is a fast-ball on the outside corner?

400

This character, whom we never meet in the novel, keeps her kings in the back row when playing checkers. 

Who is Jane Gallagher?

400

This device uses an exaggeration for emphasis or effect, such as “I’ve told you a million times.”

What is a hyperbole?

500
This American poet graduated from Wellesley High School in 1950.

Who is Sylvia Plath?

500

In the sentence, "Skiing is fun!" the word "skiing" is an -ing word acting as a noun, also known as this.

What is a gerund?

500

The epigraph of the play says that when the "sins of the father visit us, we do not have to" do this. 

What is "play host"?

500

Holden enjoys discussing this work of literature with a nun he meets while having breakfast at a diner.

What is Romeo and Juliet?

500

This literary device uses a part of something to represent the whole (or occasionally the whole to represent a part), as in calling workers “hands.”

What is a synecdoche?

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