AP Lang: Multiple Choice (p. 213)
*49.* Which of the given footnotes is a *primary source*?
*A.* *4*
*48.* The tone of the passage can best be described as
*A.* *factual*
*40.* Stone develops her speech using all of the following EXCEPT:
*A.* an ad hominem argument
*6.* The primary rhetorical strategy the author uses to develop the second paragraph is
*A.* contrast and comparison
*41.* In light of the passage, how can the following sentence near the end of the first paragraph best be characterized? "It shall be *the business of my life to deepen this disappointment* in every woman's heart until she bows down to it no longer."
*A.* ironic and *paradoxical*
*27.* The first paragraph contains an extended example of
*A.* parallel structure
*15.* In the fifth sentence, ... the pronoun "him" refers to
*A.* youthful aspirant
*46.* The organization pattern of the passage is
*B.* *specific to general*
*50.* A critical reader of this passage should ask all of the following questions about footnote 7 EXCEPT:
*B.* How many estimates were actually constructed?
*38.* *What can the reader infer* based upon the sentence found in the middle of paragraph 1 that begins with "I was disappointed..." and ending with "and the housekeeper"?
*B.* Teaching was *not considered a worthy* profession
*26.* The shift in the focus of the piece occurs in which line?
*B.* The first sentence of paragraph 3
*4.* Near the end of the third paragraph, .... The most probable reason for the author choosing to write two separate sentences rather than constructing a single, longer sentence using a listing, is
*B.* both subjects are of *equal importance*, although separate processes
*44.* The speaker's purpose is most probably to
*B.* exhort
*34.* The *subtle humor* of the first paragraph is dependent upon
*B.* hyperbole
*13.* According to James, beauty and truth are directly related to
*B.* intelligence
*39.* The thesis of the passage is best expressed in
*B.* paragraph 1, sentence 7 ("In education...")
*18.* In the middle of the passage, the sentence "'Enjoy it as it deserves,' I should say to him; 'take possession of it, *explore it* to its utmost extent, *publish it*, *rejoice in it*,'" includes an example of
*B.* parallel structure
*22.* The controlling *analogy* of the passage is
*B.* sea and land
*29.* The development of paragraph 3 is structured around
*B.* selection of *incremental details*
*31.* One may conclude from the information contained in paragraph 3 that *"Himmalehan, salt-sea Mastedon"* refers to
*B.* the whale
*1.* Which rhetorical technique does the author employ to focus the reader's attention on the specific topic of the passage?
*C.* *beginning* each paragraph with the same subject
*54.* Based on a careful reading of footnote 5, the reader can correctly *assume that Winship and Jencks are*
*C.* *students*
*43.* In the sentence beginning with "Wendell Phillips says..." in the middle of paragraph 2, Lucy Stone develops her point using
*C.* a syllogism
*47.* The reader may infer from lines 35-38 that the writer
*C.* admires the *welfare programs* of countries *other than those of the United States*
*24.* The tone of the passage can best be described as
*C.* admiring and hyperbolic
*7.* In terms of her position on her subject, the author can best be categorized as
*C.* an advocate
*21.* The overall tone of the passage can best be described as
*C.* didactic and exhortative
*9.* The contrast between the short story writer and the essayist is based on which of the following?
*C.* fundamental reality
*32.* The purpose of the passage is probably to
*C.* honor the indomitable spirit of the Nantucketers
*11.* James draws a distinction between the purpose of the novel and
*C.* the *mind* of the producer
*5.* In paragraph 3, in the sentence beginning with "The real world...," the word "there" refers to
*D.* "the real world"
*51.* Another effective means of presenting the *statistical material* found in this passage would most probably be a(n)
*D.* *chart or graph*
*53.* In lines 35-38, the author's *bias/agenda* is most clearly evidence through
*D.* *diction* and syntax
*25.* The most probable reason for repeating and italicizing "*There*" in the middle of paragraph 4 at the beginning of two main clauses in the same sentence is to
*D.* *emphasize* the sense of place
*14.* According to the fourth sentence, the word "axiom" can best be defined as
*D.* a rule of thumb
*20.* Also in the middle of the passage is a sentence ... The metaphor, "this heavenly messenger," contained in this sentence refers to
*D.* art
*28.* Melville retells the Native American *legend* of how the island was settled in order to
*D.* bring a *mythic quality* to the subject
*3.* The primary rhetorical strategy the author uses to develop the first paragraph is
*D.* cause and effect
*19.* In the second half of the passage, if the student follows the logic and *advice* of James ... that student would have to
*D.* ignore James's *advice*
*36.* The tone of the passage can best be described as
*D.* indignant and argumentative
*33.* Melville uses *thus* twice in this passage: ... All of the following are reasons for using *thus* in the first sentence of paragraph 4 EXCEPT
*D.* to reinforce the *formality* of his presentation
*17.* According to Henry James, the freest form of art is
*D.* writing
*8.* An example of *parallel structure* is found in which of the following lines taken from the passage?
*E.* "In either case he renders the real world coherent and meaningful; *even if* only bits of it, and *even if* that coherence and meaning reside only inside small texts."
*52.* The footnote that most likely reflects a *specific bias* is found in
*E.* *8*
*45.* The argument presented in the passage is based on
*E.* *statistical data*
*37.* A major *hypothesis* presented by the speaker is that
*E.* *women and African Americans* are on the same level
*16.* In the seventh sentence, "The danger that he has in mind is rather, I imagine, that of particularizing." The word *"rather"* establishes
*E.* an antithesis
*30.* This passage can best be classified as an example of argument based on
*E.* analogy
*2.* Based on a careful reading of the first paragraph, the reader can conclude that the author blames the death of the "novel of idea" on
*E.* artificiality
*10.* The tone of the passage can best be described as
*E.* confident and informative
*12.* From the opening of the passage, it is clear that the author's attitude toward the creation of a work of art is
*E.* elitist
*23.* Melville describes Nantucketers as all of the following *except*:
*E.* exploiters of the Native American claims
*42.* Based on a careful reading of the passage, one can assume that the speaker
*E.* is *disappointed with her female contemporaries*
*35.* The last sentence of the passage *CONTINUES* the *analogy* between
*E.* sea and land
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