Mrs. League’s Final Exam Review—American Lit 111A

Vocabulary: Know the definitions for each of the words below and be able to use the word in a sentence.

Unit 1 / Unit 2 / Unit 3 / Unit 4
acquisitive / Animadversion / Cavort / Atrophy
banal / brackish / Credence / Concord
carping / devious / Dissemble / Consummate
congeal / halcyon / Distraught / Disarray
encomium / histrionic / Evince / Frenetic
germane / maelstrom / Exhume / Glean
intransigent / overt / Murky / Grouse
largesse / pejorative / Piquant / Incarcerate
substantiate / sacrilege / Propinquity / Incumbent
taciturn / suppliant / substantive / pecuniary
Unit 5 / Unit 6 / Unit 7 / Unit 8
Depraved / Effigy / Counterpart / Allege
Enervate / Inane / Effrontery / Conciliate
Fecund / Indictment / Embellish / Echelon
Fiat / Intermittent / Felicitous / Exacerbate
Hallow / Moot / Garish / Fatuous
Ignominy / Motif / Indigent / Irrefutable
Nuance / Neophyte / Jettison / Juggernaut
Penchant / Plenary / Pertinacious / Lackadaisical
Reputed / Sylvan / Picayune / Litany
Sophistry / Testy / raiment / Slough

Literary Characters: Given a character from a literary work, identify the work and explain his or her significance within the work.

  • Arthur Dimmesdale
  • Ellen Sewell
  • Henry Thoreau
  • Hester Prynne
  • Holden Caulfield
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Mr. Covey
  • Mr. Antolini
  • Roger Chillingworth
  • Sam Staples
  • Tom Walker
  • Rip Van Winkle
  • Pearl

Literary Terms: Define the following literary terms and give an example of each.

  • allusion
  • almanac
  • anaphora
  • anecdote
  • antithesis
  • aphorism
  • apostrophe
  • autobiography
  • epistrophe
  • conceit
  • concession/refutation
  • couplet
  • cumulative sentence
  • ethos
  • expressionism
  • feminine rhyme
  • folk tale
  • imagery
  • inversion
  • logos
  • masculine rhyme
  • metaphor
  • meter
  • oratory
  • ornate
  • paradox
  • parallelism
  • periodic sentence
  • pathos
  • personification
  • Puritan Plain Style
  • quatrain
  • repetition
  • restatement
  • rhetorical question
  • rhetorical triangle
  • sermon
  • symbol
  • synecdoche
  • telegraphic sentence

Literary Periods: Be able to identify characteristics of each literary period.

Colonial Period

Revolutionary Period

Romantic Period/Transcendentalism

Author identification and background: Know basic background information for each author and be able to name their significant writings.

William Bradford

Anne Bradstreet

Phillis Wheatley

Ben Franklin

Patrick Henry

Thomas Paine

William Cullen Bryant

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Oliver Wendell Holmes

James Russell Lowell

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Henry David Thoreau

Text familiarity: Know the main focus of each selection below.

Colonial Period

from Of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford

“To My Dear and Loving Husband” by Anne Bradstreet

“Upon the Burning of Our House”

from Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God by Jonathan Edwards

Excerpt from The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano

“Huswifery” by Edward Taylor

Revolutionary Period

from The Autobiography by Ben Franklin

from Poor Richard’s Almanack by Ben Franklin

from Speech in the Virginia Convention by Patrick Henry

from The Crisis by Thomas Paine

“On Being Brought from Africa to America”by Phillis Wheatley

Romantic Period and Transcendentalism

“To a Waterfowl” by William Cullen Bryant

“Thanatopsis” by William Cullen Bryant

“The First Snowfall” by James Russell Lowell

“The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

“A Psalm of Life” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

“Old Ironsides” by Oliver Wendell Holmes

from Nature by Ralph Waldo Emerson

from Self Reliance by Ralph Waldo Emerson

from Civil Disobedienceby Henry David Thoreau

Parallel ReadingsOutline the plot (use 10 significant points from beginning to end) of the novels or dramas read.

The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass

The Scarlet Letter

The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail

Critical Reading—Answer questions on a selection not covered in class that is from the time period studied.

FORMAT OF THE EXAM: Approximately 125-150 multiple choice questions.