A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Vladimir Nabokov
A. Joseph Conrad
B. Ernest Hemingway
C. James Joyce
D. Jack London
A. I. A. Richards
B. John Haffenden
C. William Empson
D. David Pirie
A. 1965
B. 1966
C. 1975
D. 1960
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Vladimir Nabokov
A. Mercedes Barcha
B. Gabriel García Márquez
C. Mario Vargas Llosa
D. Jorge Luis Borges
A. Things Fall Apart
B. A Dance of the Forests
C. Midnight’s Children
D. All of these
A. Aimé Césaire
B. Léon-Gontran Damas
C. Frantz Fanon
D. Édouard Glissant
A. Ulysses
B. Dubliners
C. Finnegans Wake
D. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
A. Charles Baudelaire
B. Arthur Rimbaud
C. Paul Verlaine
D. All of these
A. The School for Scandal
B. The Rivals
C. The Critic
D. The Poetaster
A. The Confidence Man
B. The Horse’s Mouth
C. Invisible Man
D. All of these
A. Culture and Anarchy
B. Dover Beach’
C. Sohrab and Rustum
D. The Scholar Gipsy
A. 1885
B. 1884
C. 1850
D. 1860
A. Franny and Zooey
B. A Perfect Day for Bananafish
C. Nine Stories
D. The Catcher in the Rye
A. I. A. Richards
B. John Haffenden
C. William Empson
D. David Pirie
A. The Shepherd’s Calendar
B. Arcadia
C. As You Like It
D. All of these
A. David Lodge
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Northrop Frye
D. Ian Watt
A. Italo Calvino
B. Stefano Eco
C. Jorge Luis Borges
D. Umberto Eco
A. Northanger Abbey
B. Sense and Sensibility
C. Mansfield Park
D. Emma
A. Robert Penn Warren
B. Cleanth Brooks
C. Allen Tate
D. John Crowe Ransom
A. Common Sense
B. Rights of Man
C. The American Crisis
D. The Age of Reason
A. Jonathan Swift
B. Robert Louis Stevenson
C. Daniel Defoe
D. Henry Fielding
A. Samuel Johnson
B. John Milton
C. Alexander Pope
D. James Boswell
A. Sir Thomas More
B. William Tyndale
C. Robert Greene
D. All of these
A. Najla Said
B. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
C. Homi K. Bhabha
D. Edward Said
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Walt Whitman
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Matthew Arnold
B. Thomas Arnold
C. Robert Browning
D. T. S. Eliot
A. 24
B. 25
C. 27
D. 30
A. 24
A. 1924
B. 1935
C. 1925
D. 1930
A. James Joyce
B. Henry James
C. Jane Austen
D. All of these
A. Sir Walter Scott
B. William Makepeace Thackeray
C. Charles Dickens
D. None of these
A. Jane Austen
B. Stendahl
C. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
D. All of these
A. Aleksandr Pushkin
B. Ivan Turgenev
C. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
D. All of these
A. Honoré de Balzac
B. Gustave Flaubert
C. Stendahl
D. All of these
A. James Joyce
B. Franz Kafka
C. William Butler Yeats
D. Samuel Beckett
A. George Bernard Shaw
B. H. G. Wells
C. Samuel Beckett
D. William Shakespeare
A. James Joyce
B. Franz Kafka
C. William Butler Yeats
D. Samuel Beckett
A. Mary McCarthy
B. Lionel Trilling
C. Sidney Hook
D. All of these
A. 1925
B. 1926
C. 1927
D. 1930
A. Aimé Césaire
B. Léon-Gontran Damas
C. Frantz Fanon
D. Édouard Glissant
A. Leslie Marmon Silko
B. Louise Erdrich
C. James Welch
D. All of these
A. Mary Shelley
B. Fanny Stevenson
C. R.L. Stevenson
D. Rudyard Kipling
A. House Made of Dawn
B. The Way to Rainy Mountain
C. The names
D. The ancient child
A. 1890
B. 1891
C. 1880
D. 1889
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Vladimir Nabokov
A. James H. Smith
B. William Faulkner
C. John Russell
D. C. S. Lewis
A. Harold Bloom
B. I. A. Richards
C. Robert Denham
D. Northrop Frye
A. Harriet Beecher Stowe
B. Leslie Fiedler
C. Samuel Wilkeson
D. Edgar B. Jewett
A. Douglas C. Aagard
B. Peter J. Abbate Jr.
C. Greg Abbott
D. James Frazier
A. Look Back in Anger
B. Get Carter
C. Tom Jones
D. The Entertainer
A. Charles lamb
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. Oscar Wilde
D. Mary Lamb
A. Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko
B. Vsevolod Meyerhold
C. Michael Chekhov
D. Konstantin Stanislavski
A. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
B. Alfred Russel Wallace
C. Francis Darwin
D. Charles Darwin
A. T. S. Eliot
B. Ezra Pound
C. William Carlos Williams
D. William Butler Yeats
A. Rutebeuf
B. Adam de la Halle
C. Jean Bodel
D. None of these
A. Wyatt and Surrey
B. John Donne
C. Edmund Spenser
D. Sir Philip Sydney
A. William Butler Yeats
B. James Joyce
C. John Millington
D. All of these
A. John Arden
B. Harold Pinter
C. Arnold Wesker
D. Margaret Edson
A. George Herbert
B. Henry Vaughan
C. Andrew Marvel
D. John Donne
A. John Milton
B. John Dryden
C. Alexander Pope
D. John Donne
A. 1735
B. 1738
C. 1745
D. None of these
A. The Historical Novel
B. Lenin and Philosophy
C. Marxism and Literary Criticism
D. All of these
A. Robert Browning
B. Alfred Tennyson
C. Matthew Arnold
D. T. S. Eliot
A. Simone de Beauvoir
B. Jean-Paul Sartre
C. Albert Camus
D. Judith Butler
A. Shakespeare
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. John Fletcher
D. Thomas Kyd
A. John Milton
B. John Dryden
C. Alexander Pope
D. John Donne
A. One Hundred Years of Solitude
B. Beloved
C. The Dead Father
D. All of these
A. Henry IV
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Phoebe
B. Jaques
C. Orlando
D. Rosalind
A. Oscar Wilde
B. Henry James
C. Aubrey Beardsley
D. All of these
A. David Lodge
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Northrop Frye
D. Ian Watt
A. Robert Browning
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Mathew Arnold
D. Lionel Trilling
A. Woody Allen
B. George Lucas
C. Tim Burton
D. Stanley Kubrick
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Nikolai Gogol
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. Henry James
B. Herman Melville
C. F. O. Matthiessen
D. Adelaide Crapsey
A. John Arden
B. Harold Pinter
C. Arnold Wesker
D. Edward Bond
A. J. D. Salinger
B. Normal Mailer
C. Susan Sontag
D. All of these
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Vladimir Nabokov
A. James Joyce
B. Gustave Flaubert
C. Robert Proust
D. Marcel Proust
A. Monica Sone
B. John Okada
C. Yoshiko Uchida
D. All of these
A. Understanding Poetry
B. Understanding Fiction
C. Literary Criticism: A Short History
D. The Well Wrought Urn
A. Harry Harrison
B. Brian Aldiss
C. J. G. Ballard
D. David Wingrove
A. George Eliot
B. Thomas Hardy
C. Charlotte Brontë
D. Jane Austen
A. Paul Elam
B. Cassie Jaye
C. Dr John Gray
D. Warren Farell
A. Katha Pollitt
B. Randy Cohen
C. Victoria Brittain
D. Sarah Kernochan
A. Wendy Kaminer
B. Toni Morrison
C. Maya Angelou
D. Doris Lessing
A. Mary Barton
B. North and South
C. Hard Times
D. All of these
A. David Lodge
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Northrop Frye
D. Ian Watt
A. The act of reading
B. The Implied Reader
C. L’acte de lecture
D. How to do theory
A. Charles lamb
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. Oscar Wilde
D. Mary Lamb
A. Idyll
B. Sonnet
C. Limerick
D. Ode
A. John Milton
B. John Dryden
C. Alexander Pope
D. John Donne
A. Samuel Johnson
B. John Milton
C. Alexander Pope
D. James Boswell
A. The Awakening
B. Their Eyes Were Watching God
C. The Female Imagina- tion
D. All of these
A. Culture and Anarchy
B. Dover Beach’
C. Sohrab and Rustum
D. The Scholar Gipsy
A. James Weldon Johnson
B. W. E. B. Du Bois
C. Hurston
D. All of these
A. As You Like It
B. Hamlet
C. Macbeth
D. Tempest
A. Manner
B. Humor
C. Stunts
D. All of these
A. Cordelia
B. Goneril
C. Regan
D. Curan
A. 27
B. 26
C. 15
D. 20
A. John Updike
B. Philip Roth
C. Saul Bellow
D. Philip Roth
A. The Portrait of a Lady
B. Daisy Miller
C. The Ambassadors
D. The Turn of the Screw
A. A Passage to India
B. A Room with a View
C. Howards End
D. Maurice
A. Walt Whitman
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Dr Faustus
B. Jew of Malta
C. Tamburlaine the Great
D. Edward II
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. L’Étranger
B. The Plague
C. The Myth of Sisyphus
D. The Stranger
A. Antigone
B. Electra
C. Ajax
D. Oedipus Rex
A. The Complete Works of Shakespeare
B. Bad quarto
C. Codex Leicester
D. First Folio
A. The Second Sex
B. Thinking about Women
C. Sexual Politics ‘
D. All of these
A. The Magic Mountain
B. Der tod in Venedig
C. Doctor Faustus
D. Joseph and His Brothers
A. Midnight’s Children
B. Shame
C. The Satanic Verses
D. Quichotte
A. Tennessee Williams
B. Arthur Miller
C. Henry Miller
D. Elia Kazan
A. 1925
B. 1923
C. 1930
D. 1935
A. The Town
B. Wonderland
C. To Damascus
D. Flower by the Shore
A. Nausea
B. Existentialism Is a Humanism
C. What Is Literature?
D. Troubled Sleep
A. Notes from Underground
B. The Scrivener
C. The Death of Ivan Ilych
D. All of these
A. Sylvia Bataille
B. Georges Bataille
C. Maurice Blanchot
D. Marquis de Sade
A. Henry IV
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Paul De Man
B. J. Hillis Miller
C. Geoffrey Hartman
D. All of these
A. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
B. Thomas Mann
C. Franz Kafka
D. Ernest Hemingway
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Sophia Tolstaya
C. Anton Chekhov
D. Leo Tolstoy
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Charles Lamb
B. Ralph Waldo Emerson
C. John Ruskin
D. All of these
A. Pamela
B. Clarissa
C. Letters
D. All of these
A. William Cowper
B. Samuel Johnson
C. Alexander Pope
D. Thomas Gray
A. Giovanni Verga
B. Italo Svevo
C. Stefano Pirandello’
D. Luigi Pirandello
A. Changing Places
B. The Art of Fiction
C. Therapy
D. Nice Work
A. Axel von Ambesser
B. Julius Bab
C. Kurt Walter Barthel
D. Bertolt Brecht
A. Axel von Ambesser
B. Julius Bab
C. Kurt Walter Barthel
D. Bertolt Brecht
A. John Steinbeck
B. William Faulkner
C. D. W. Griffith
D. None of these
A. James Joyce
B. Gustave Flaubert
C. Robert Proust
D. Marcel Proust
A. Astrophel and Stella
B. An Apology for Poetry
C. The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia
D. Sidney Psalms
A. A Passage to India
B. A Room with a View
C. Howards End
D. Maurice
A. Joseph Conrad
B. Thomas Hardy
C. Rupert Brooke
D. HG Wells
A. Henry David Thoreau’s Walden
B. Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
C. John McPhee’s Coming into the Country
D. All of the above
A. Adonais
B. Fern Hill
C. Ode to Psyche
D. All of these
A. Romeo and Juliet
B. Macbeth
C. The Tempest
D. Hamlet
A. Piers Plowman
B. The Pearl
C. Dream of the Rood
D. The House of Fame
A. Carl Jung
B. Friedrich Nietzsche
C. Sigmund Freud
D. Anna Freud
A. Strafford
B. My Last Duchess
C. Men and Women
D. The Ring and the Book
A. Aristotle
B. Plato
C. Sophocles
D. Socrates
A. Selected Essays
B. The Waste Land
C. The Hollow Men
D. Preludes
A. Tales from the Secret Annex
B. The Diary of a Young Girl
C. The Diary of Anne Frank
D. None of these
A. David Hume
B. John Locke
C. Immanuel Kant
D. René Descartes
A. 1840
B. 1830
C. 1844
D. 1850
A. H. P. Lovecraft
B. Oscar Wilde
C. Arthur Conan Doyle
D. Edgar Allan Poe
A. Paul De Man
B. J. Hillis Miller
C. Geoffrey Hartman
D. All of these
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Sophia Tolstaya
C. Anton Chekhov
D. Leo Tolstoy
A. 1634
B. 1635
C. 1624
D. 1623
A. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
B. Alfred Russel Wallace
C. Francis Darwin
D. Charles Darwin
A. 1922
B. 1923
C. 1933
D. 1930
A. Robert Penn Warren
B. Cleanth Brooks
C. Allen Tate
D. John Crowe Ransom
A. Confessional Poetry
B. Classical Poetry
C. Elegy
D. Epic Poetry
A. Flannery O’Connor
B. William Faulkner
C. Carson McCullers
D. Walker Percy
A. Tom Jones
B. Pride & Prejudice
C. Joseph Andrews
D. All of these
A. Politics
B. De Anima
C. Plutus
D. Physics
A. Samson Agonistes
B. Manfred
C. Prometheus Unbound
D. All of these
A. Oscar Wilde
B. Henrik Ibsen
C. H. G. Wells
D. George Bernard Shaw
A. Philip Roth
B. Saul Bellow
C. Norman Mailer
D. Allan Bloom
A. Chamberlain
B. King’s Men
C. Both A & B
D. Admiral’s Men
A. Shakespeare
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. John Fletcher
D. Thomas Kyd
A. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
B. Mary Lamb
C. Leigh Hunt
D. Charles Lamb
A. Sidney Smith
B. Henry Brougham
C. Francis Jeffrey
D. All of these
A. BMJ
B. Journal of British Studies
C. The Quarterly Review
D. None of these
A. Dorothy Wordsworth
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Philosopher
B. Astrologist
C. Architect
D. Doctor
A. The Life of Samuel Johnson
B. Ben Jonson: A Life
C. James Joyce
D. All of these
A. Cavalier Poetry
B. Epic Poetry
C. Ballad
D. Romantic Poetry
A. Edward King
B. Henry VII
C. Edward VI
D. Henry VIII
A. Emily Dickinson
B. Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson
C. Lavinia Norcross Dickinson
D. Emily Norcross Dickinson
A. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
B. Christabel
C. Kubla Khan
D. Frost at Midnight
A. A Frolic of His Own
B. The Recognitions
C. J R
D. Carpenter’s Gothic
A. Catch-22
B. Something Happened
C. Closing Time
D. Good as Gold
A. Thomas Middleton
B. William Rowley
C. John Ford
D. Thomas Dekker
A. T. S. Eliot
B. Ezra Pound
C. William Carlos Williams
D. William Butler Yeats
A. John Fletcher
B. Francis Beaumont
C. Philip Massinger
D. Thomas Dekker
A. Jay McInerney
B. Bret Easton Ellis
C. Tama Janowitz
D. All of these
A. Virginia Woolf
B. Vanessa Bel
C. E. M. Forster
D. All of these
A. Helene Weigel
B. Kurt Weill
C. Bertolt Brecht
D. Stefan Brecht
A. Discipline and Punish
B. Madness and Civilization
C. What Is an Author?
D. The Birth of the Clinic
A. Roland Barthes
B. Jacques Derrida
C. Michel Foucault
D. Ferdinand de Saussure
A. Marshall McLuhan
B. Paul A. Soukup
C. Marcel Duchamp
D. Walter J. Ong
A. Gulliver’s Travels
B. A Modest Proposal
C. A Tale of a Tub
D. Battle of the Books
A. Arcadia
B. Astrophel and Stella
C. The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia
D. Sidney Psalms
A. Broken Wings
B. The Madman
C. The Collected Works
D. The Prophet Book
A. George Eliot
B. Thomas Hardy
C. Charlotte Brontë
D. Emily Brontë
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. Jean-Paul Sartre
B. Franz Kafka
C. Catherine Camus
D. Albert Camus
A. Juneteenth
B. Shadow and Act
C. Going to the territory
D. Invisible Man
A. T. S. Eliot
B. John Keats
C. William Butler Yeats
D. James Joyce
A. George Farquhar
B. Richard Steele.
C. Laurence Sterne
D. All of these
A. The Mystery of Edwin Drood
B. The Fall of the House of Usher
C. Twelfth Night
D. All of these
A. Harold Bloom
B. I. A. Richards
C. Robert Denham
D. Northrop Frye
A. Janie Crawford
B. Joe Starks
C. Logan Killicks
D. Nanny
A. I. A. Richards
B. John Haffenden
C. William Empson
D. David Pirie
A. Some versions of pastoral
B. Milton’s God
C. The Structure of Complex Words
D. Seven Types of Ambiguity
A. 1945
B. 1955
C. 1960
D. 1950
A. Oona O’Neill
B. Agnes Boulton
C. Carlotta Monterey
D. Eugene O’Neill
A. Elinor Frost
B. Walt Whitman
C. Emily Dickinson
D. Robert Frost
A. Autobiographical
B. Tragic
C. Historical
D. Romantic
A. Elinor Frost
B. Walt Whitman
C. Emily Dickinson
D. Robert Frost
A. Charles Darnay
B. Madame Defarge
C. Jarvis Lorry
D. Sydney Carton
A. Viola Hastings
B. Malvolio
C. Olivia
D. Sir Toby Belch
A. Clifford Odets
B. Harold Clurman
C. Luise Rainer
D. Cheryl Crawford
A. John Updike
B. Philip Roth
C. Saul Bellow
D. John Cheever
A. Robert Browning
B. Elizabeth Barrett Browning
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. Matthew Arnold
A. Henry Fielding
B. Laurence Sterne
C. Samuel Richardson
D. Tobias Smollett
A. Henry Fielding
B. Laurence Sterne
C. Samuel Richardson
D. Tobias Smollett
A. The School for Scandal
B. The Rivals
C. The Critic
D. All of the these
A. Samuel Johnson
B. Frederick A. Pottle
C. Margaret Boswell
D. James Boswell
A. J.B. Bury
B. David Hume
C. Henry Hart Milman
D. Edward Gibbon
A. Carlyle
B. Pope
C. David Hume
D. Dr Johnson
A. Maya Angelou
B. Ishmael Reed
C. Alice Walker
D. All of these
A. Richard Wright
B. Ralph Ellison
C. James Baldwin
D. All of these
A. The Soul of a Woman
B. LIVING TO TELL THE HORRID TALES
C. Our Nig
D. None of these
A. Charles Dickens
B. Edgar Allan Poe
C. Oscar Wilde
D. James Joyce
A. Marius the Epicurean
B. Imaginary portraits
C. Studies in the History of the Renaissance
D. The Renaissance, Studies in Art and Poetry
A. 1883
B. 1884
C. 1885
D. 1875
A. John Updike’s Novels
B. Understanding John Hawkes
C. Adultery in the American novel
D. The Merrill checklist of Robert Frost
A. John Updike
B. Philip Roth
C. Saul Bellow
D. John Cheever
A. Suicide
B. Murder
C. Adultery
D. None of these
A. Language as Symbolic Action
B. The Rhetoric of Hitler’s “Battle”
C. The philosophy of literary form
D. A Grammar of Motives
A. Epictetus
B. Marcus Aurelius
C. Seneca the Elder
D. Lucius Annaeus Seneca
A. 1961
B. 1962
C. 1970
D. 2000
A. Waiting for Godot
B. Endgame
C. Rhinoceros
D. All of these
A. Martin Esslin
B. Samuel Beckett
C. Jean Genet
D. Eugène Ionesco
A. Albert Camus
B. Jean-Paul Sartre
C. Franz Kafka
D. Francine Faure
A. Roberto Bazlen
B. Fleur Jaeggy
C. Robert Calasso
D. Tim Parks
A. Wordsworth
B. Coleridge
C. Keats
D. Shelley
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Percy Bysshe Shelley
A. Bob Cratchit
B. Jacob Marley
C. Fred
D. Mr Fezziwig
A. Robert Browning
B. Emily, Lady Tennyson
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. John Keats
A. Flat
B. Round
C. Complex
D. Ambitious
A. Mary Shelley
B. Fanny Stevenson
C. R.L. Stevenson
D. Rudyard Kipling
A. Jawaharlal Nehru
B. Mahatma Gandhi
C. Martin Luther King Jr.
D. None of these
A. Mary Robinson
B. William Blake
C. William Wordsworth
D. John Keats
A. Sandition
B. Pride and Prejudice
C. Sense and Sensibility
D. Mansfield Park
A. Sandition
B. Pride and Prejudice
C. Sense and Sensibility
D. Mansfield Park
A. Sandition
B. Pride and Prejudice
C. Sense and Sensibility
D. Mansfield Park
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. Pride and Prejudice
B. Emma
C. Mansfield Park
D. Sense and Sensibility
A. Headlong Hall
B. Maid Marian
C. Melincourt
D. All of these
A. Asia
B. Hercules
C. Jupiter
D. All of these
A. Greek
B. Norse
C. Hindu
D. None of these
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Don Alfonso
B. Julia, Sultana
C. Don Juan
D. All of these
A. The Corsair
B. Mazeppa
C. She Walks in Beauty
D. Don Juan
A. The Corsair
B. Mazeppa
C. She Walks in Beauty
D. Don Juan
A. 15
B. 16
C. 17
D. 20
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Robert Southey
A. Rime of the Ancient Mariner
B. Kubla Khan
C. Lyrical Ballads
D. Christabel
A. “Michael”
B. “The Solitary Reaper,”
C. “To a Highland Girl”
D. All of these
A. Childe Harold
B. Don Juan
C. She Walks in Beauty
D. Manfred
A. Canto III
B. Canto IV
C. Canto V
D. Canto VI
A. Spain
B. Portugal
C. Greece
D. All of these
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Robert Burns
C. Sir Walter Scott
D. Lord Byron
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Percy Bysshe Shelley
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Dorothy Wordsworth
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Rime of the Ancient Mariner
B. Kubla Khan
C. Lyrical Ballads
D. Christabel
A. Rime of the Ancient Mariner
B. Kubla Khan
C. Lyrical Ballads
D. Christabel
A. 1798
B. 1776
C. 1780
D. 1779
A. Wordsworth
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Ode to a Nightingale
B. To Autumn
C. Ode on a Grecian Urn
D. Endymion
A. 4000
B. 4500
C. 3500
D. 3900
A. The Seagull
B. Uncle Vanya
C. Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard
D. All of these
A. Ethics
B. Politics
C. Love
D. Science
A. 1733
B. 1734
C. 1772
D. 1800
A. Rape of the lock
B. An Essay on Criticism
C. Essay on Man
D. The Dunciad
A. John Dennis
B. Alistair MacLean
C. Jeremy Taylor
D. Daniel Defoe
A. Rape of the lock
B. An Essay on Criticism
C. Essay on Man
D. The Dunciad
A. Vijay Tendulkar
B. Pamela Rooks
C. Mahesh Dattani
D. Lillete Dubey
A. Pearl C Buck
B. James Joyce
C. Aldous Huxley
D. F. Scott Fitzgerald
A. Shashi Deshpande
B. Anita Desai
C. Kamala Marakandaya
D. Nayantara Sahgal
A. Toru Dutt
B. Madhav Das Nalapat
C. Nissim Ezekiel
D. Kamala Das
A. Balamani Amma
B. Madhav Das Nalapat
C. Nissim Ezekiel
D. Kamala Das
A. Dubhang
B. Uchakka
C. The Branded
D. None of these
A. Daughter’s Daughter
B. The Other Country
C. My Own Witness
D. Devi: Tales of the Goddess of Our Time
A. The God of Small Things
B. The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
C. My Seditious Heart
D. The end of imagination
A. 1551
B. 1556
C. 1555
D. 1660
A. John Gower
B. Geoffrey Chaucer
C. William Langland
D. Sir Lewis Clifford
A. Milton’s age
B. Wordsworth‘s age
C. Chaucer’s age
D. None of these
A. The Doctor and the Devils and Other Scripts
B. Under Milk Wood
C. Rebecca’s Daughters, Triton
D. None of these
A. Agatha Christie
B. Edgar Allan Poe
C. Adrian Conan Doyle
D. Arthur Conan Doyle
A. Agatha Christie
B. Edgar Allan Poe
C. Adrian Conan Doyle
D. Arthur Conan Doyle
A. Robert Burns.
B. Tobias Smollett
C. Robert Louis Stevenson
D. Henry Mackenzie
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. Romeo and Juliet
D. Twelfth Night
A. Maya Angelou
B. Sylvia Plath
C. Audre Lorde
D. None of these
A. The Soldier
B. The Old Vicarage, Grantchester
C. Lithuania
D. Both A & C
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Sonnets from the Portuguese
B. How do I love thee
C. Aurora Leigh
D. Casa Guidi Windows
A. Poloniusin
B. King Claudius
C. Laertes
D. Hamlet
A. Paradise Lost
B. When I Consider How My Light is Spent
C. Lycidas
D. L’Allegro
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Psychopath
B. Kleptomaniac
C. A passionate lover
D. None of these
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Pip
B. Mr Jaggers
C. John Wemmick
D. Miss Havisham
A. Sandition
B. Pride and Prejudice
C. Sense and Sensibility
D. Mansfield Park
A. Elizabeth Barrett Browning
B. Walt Whitman
C. D. G. Rossetti
D. Robert Browning
A. Elizabeth Barrett Browning
B. Walt Whitman
C. D. G. Rossetti
D. Matthew Arnold
A. The Pickwick Papers
B. The Old Curiosity Shop
C. Great Expectations
D. David Copperfield
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
B. The Prelude
C. Immortality Ode
D. The World Is Too Much with Us
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Thomas Hardy
B. James Joyce
C. D. H. Lawrence
D. Frieda Lawrence
A. Ulysses
B. The Princess
C. In Memoriam A.H.H.
D. The Lady of Shalott
A. 1665
B. 1662
C. 1669
D. 1670
A. Sir John Falstaff
B. Sir Andrew Aguecheek
C. Malvolio
D. Dogberry
A. Hamlet
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Emma
B. Pride and Prejudice
C. Sense and Sensibility
D. Mansfield Park
A. Evelyn Waugh
B. John Le Carré
C. Graham Greene
D. Hugh Greene
A. Henry IV
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Percy Bysshe Shelley
A. Tailor Repatched
B. Tailor Died
C. Tailor Returned
D. None of these
A. Robert Browning
B. T. S. Eliot
C. William Wordsworth
D. Matthew Arnold
A. Wordsworth
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. The Second Coming
B. The Lake Isle of Innisfree
C. The Stolen Child
D. A Prayer for My Daughter
A. Ophelia
B. King Claudius
C. Laertes
D. Hamlet
A. Ozymandias
B. Adonais
C. Ode to the West Wind
D. To a Skylark
A. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
B. Christabel
C. Kubla Khan
D. Frost at Midnight
A. As You Like It
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Spirit of Revolt
B. Spirit of Obedience
C. Spirit of Ambition
D. None of these
A. As You Like It
B. The Tempest
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. Twelfth Night
A. Ben Johnson
B. Marlowe
C. Dryden
D. Shakespeare
A. Tuberculosis
B. Pneumonia
C. Heart Attack
D. Cancer
A. 1928
B. 1927
C. 1922
D. 1930
A. Robert Browning
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Mathew Arnold
D. Alfred Tennyson
A. Sir Walter Raleigh
B. Philip Sidney
C. John Skelton
D. Mary Sidney
A. Ian McEwan
B. Dan Abnett
C. Hilary Mantel
D. Peter Ackroyd
A. Addison
B. Steele
C. Shakespeare
D. Both A & B
A. Bertrand Russell
B. Jonathan Swift
C. Francis Bacon
D. Friedrich Nietzsche
A. Christopher Marlowe
B. Ben Jonson
C. Thomas Kyd
D. Thomas Sackville
A. Bertrand Russell
B. Jonathan Swift
C. Francis Bacon
D. Friedrich Nietzsche
A. Thomas Lodge
B. Thomas Nash
C. John Lyly
D. Thomas Kyd
A. Thomas Wyatt
B. Henry Howard
C. Elizabeth Brooke
D. Philip Sidney
A. 1576
B. 1573
C. 1500
D. 1580
A. Christopher Marlowe
B. Ben Jonson
C. Thomas Kyd
D. Thomas Sackville
A. Mort D’ Arthur
B. King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
C. Basic History
D. King Arthur’s Last Battle
A. Alexander Barclay
B. Jacob Locher
C. Anton Sommer
D. William Langland
A. Peter Babylon
B. Geoffrey Chaucer
C. Gawain Poet
D. William Langland
A. Troilus and Criseyde
B. The Book of the Duchess
C. The Legend of Good Women
D. The Cook’s Tale
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Percy Bysshe Shelley
A. Edmund Burke
B. Dr Johnson
C. David Hume
D. Ben Johnson
A. Eugenius
B. Crites
C. Neander
D. Lisideius
A. Aristotle
B. Sophocles
C. Plato
D. Cassius Longinus
A. Aristotle
B. Sophocles
C. Plato
D. Socrates
A. Prophetic novels
B. Classic novels
C. Historical novels
D. Fantasy novels
A. Virginia Woolf
B. James Joyce
C. Vita Sackville-West
D. Vanessa Bell
A. Walt Whitman
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. John Ruskin
B. Edward Burne-Jones
C. William Morris
D. William Holman Hunt
A. Hamlet
B. Romeo and Juliet
C. Macbeth
D. The Tempest
A. W. H. Auden
B. Stephen Spender
C. Christopher Isherwood
D. Humphrey Spender
A. Walt Whitman
B. T. S. Eliot
C. Hopkins
D. John Keats
A. Robert Louis Stevenson
B. Lewis Carroll
C. Arthur Conan Doyle
D. Rudyard Kipling
A. Joseph Conrad
B. Ernest Hemingway
C. James Joyce
D. Jack London
A. 1925
B. 1927
C. 1924
D. 1930
A. Loyalties
B. The Eldest Son
C. Strife
D. Justice
A. Loyalties
B. The Eldest Son
C. Strife
D. The Skin Game
A. Arms and the Man
B. Mrs Warren’s Profession
C. Candida
D. Pygmalion
A. Man and Superman
B. Mrs Warren’s Profession
C. Candida
D. Pygmalion
A. Arms and the Man
B. Mrs Warren’s Profession
C. Candida
D. Pygmalion
A. Man and Superman
B. Mrs Warren’s Profession
C. Candida
D. Pygmalion
A. Vita and Virginia
B. Mrs Dalloway
C. Orlando
D. To the Lighthouse
A. Kangaroo
B. Lady Chatterley’s Lover
C. The Rainbow
D. Women in Love
A. D.H. Lawrence
B. Thomas Hardy
C. James Joyce
D. E. M. Forster
A. The Iliad
B. Odyssey
C. Margites
D. None of these
A. The Waste Land
B. The Hollow Men
C. Preludes
D. Journey of the Magi
A. 3
B. 2
C. 5
D. 4
A. T. S. Eliot
B. William Carlos Williams
C. Ezra Pound
D. Gertrude Stein
A. Culture and Anarchy
B. Dover Beach’
C. Sohrab and Rustum
D. The Scholar Gipsy
A. Ben Ezra
B. Meeting at Night
C. Porphyria’s Lover
D. The Ring and the Book
A. Jules Verne
B. Émile Zola
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. Tom Taylor
A. Manchester and Marseille
B. London and Paris
C. Liverpool and London
D. Bristol and Nice
A. Charles Dickens
B. William Collins
C. Wilkie Collins
D. Thomas Hardy
A. The Dynasts
B. Far from the Madding Crowd
C. Jude the obscure
D. The Mayor of Casterbridge
A. The Dynasts
B. Far from the Madding Crowd
C. Jude the obscure
D. The Mayor of Casterbridge
A. The Dynasts
B. Far from the Madding Crowd
C. Jude the obscure
D. The Mayor of Casterbridge
A. Anne Clough
B. Gerard Manley Hopkins
C. Hugh Clough
D. Walt Whitman
A. Emily, Lady Tennyson
B. Henry Hallam
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. Arthur Hallam
A. Edwin Drood
B. A Tale of Two Cities
C. Great Expectations
D. The Old Curiosity Shop
A. Psychological novel
B. Picaresque novel
C. Historical novel
D. Science Fiction
A. Pendennis
B. The History of Henry Esmond
C. The Virginians
D. Vanity Fair
A. Politics
B. Education
C. Religion
D. Society
A. Theology
B. Science
C. Philosophy
D. Astrology
A. Elizabeth Barret Browning
B. Walt Whitman
C. Thomas Hardy
D. Edgar Allan Poe
A. Queen Elizabeth
B. Queen Victoria
C. James I
D. George I
A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Ben Johnson
D. Milton
A. All for Love
B. Dryden’s Essay of Dramatic Poesy
C. Absolem and Achitophel
D. The Medal
A. Robert Southey
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. William Blake
D. Lord Byron
A. Marlowe
B. Shakespeare
C. Ben Johnson
D. Thomas Kyd
A. Abraham Cowley
B. Henry Vaughan
C. John Milton
D. Pope
A. Alexander Balfour
B. J. M. Barrie
C. George Douglas Brown
D. Walter Scott
A. Mary Lamb
B. Charles Lamb
C. Both A & B
D. Leigh Hunt
A. To Autumn
B. Ode on a Grecian Urn
C. Endymion
D. Hyperion
A. To Autumn
B. Ode on a Grecian Urn
C. Endymion
D. Hyperion
A. Ozymandias
B. Ode to the West Wind
C. Adonais
D. Queen Mab
A. S. T. Coleridge
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. Lord Byron
D. John Keats
A. Eve of St. Agnes
B. Ode to a Nightingale
C. To Autumn
D. Endymion
A. William Wordsworth
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. Lord Byron
D. John Keats
A. Nightmare Abbey
B. Headlong Hall
C. Maid Marian
D. The Four Ages of Poetry
A. Lord Byron
B. Walter Scott
C. Robert Burns
D. Charles Dickens
A. Lord Byron
B. John Keats
C. Percy Bysshe Shelley
D. William Wordsworth
A. Lord Byron
B. John Keats
C. Percy Bysshe Shelley
D. William Wordsworth
A. George I
B. George II
C. Ernest Augustus
D. William IV
A. Kubla Khan
B. Christabel
C. Frost at Midnight
D. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
A. Lord Byron
B. John Keats
C. Percy Bysshe Shelley
D. William Wordsworth
A. The Prelude
B. I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
C. The Solitary Reaper
D. Lucy Gray
A. The Good-Natur’d Man
B. She Stoops to Conquer
C. The Vicar of Wakefield
D. The Citizen of the World
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats
D. Percy Bysshe Shelley
A. Pride and Prejudice
B. Sense and Sensibility
C. Mansfield Park
D. Emma
A. Headlong Hall
B. Crotchet Castle
C. Nightmare Abbey
D. Maid Marian
A. James Thomson
B. William Blake
C. John Keats
D. Thomas Gray
A. I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
B. The Solitary Reaper
C. Tintern Abbey
D. Lucy Gray
A. William Cowper
B. Samuel Johnson
C. Alexander Pope
D. Thomas Gray
A. Autobiographical poem
B. Parody
C. Elegy
D. Tragedy
A. 1789
B. 1790
C. 1798
D. 1750
A. Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
B. The Fatal Sisters
C. The poems of Thomas Gray
D. None of these
A. Thomas Beach
B. Jane Brereton
C. John Dyer
D. Edward Barnes
A. Four parts
B. Three parts
C. Five parts
D. Two parts
A. Abraham Cowley
B. Oliver Goldsmith
C. William Collins
D. Alexander Pope
A. Edmund Burke
B. Dr Johnson
C. David Hume
D. Dr Johnson
A. The Hind and the Panther
B. All for Love
C. The Wild Gallant
D. The Conquest of Granada
A. Pope
B. Elizabeth
C. Dr. Johnson
D. Chaucer
A. Clarissa
B. The History of Sir Charles Grandson
C. Pamela
D. Mrs Beaumont
A. John Suckling
B. Richard Lovelace
C. Robert Herrick
D. Thomas Carew
A. All for Love
B. Dryden’s Essay of Dramatic Poesy
C. Absolem and Achitophel
D. The Medal
A. A Tale of the Tub
B. Gulliver Travels
C. A Modest Proposal
D. Drapier’s Letters
A. James Boswell
B. Dr Johnson
C. David Hume
D. Edmund Burke
A. Richard Steele
B. Joseph Addison
C. Laurence Sterne
D. Eustace Budgell
A. James Boswell
B. Dr Johnson
C. William Blake
D. Edmund Burke
A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Ben Johnson
D. Milton
A. John Dryden
B. Henry Purcell
C. Laurence Eusden
D. Nahum Tate
A. Hesperides
B. Together
C. The Cavalier Poets
D. Counsel to Girls
A. John Bunyan
B. Jonathan Edwards
C. Charles Spurgeon
D. John Wesley
A. John Bunyan
B. Jonathan Edwards
C. Charles Spurgeon
D. John Wesley
A. Puritan
B. Roman Catholicism
C. Presbyterians
D. Oriental Orthodoxy
A. Protestants
B. Roman Catholicism
C. Presbyterians
D. Oriental Orthodoxy
A. John Locke
B. David Hume
C. Thomas Hobbes
D. Voltaire
A. Ben Johnson
B. William Shakespeare
C. Christopher Marlowe
D. Dryden
A. Ben Johnson
B. William Shakespeare
C. Christopher Marlowe
D. Dryden
A. Neander
B. Lisideius
C. Crites
D. Eugenius
A. Dryden
B. Milton
C. Pope
D. Shadwell
A. Charles Diodati
B. Andrew Marvell
C. Nathan Paget
D. Edward King
A. Delilah
B. Manoa
C. Harapha
D. Messenger
A. Paradise lost
B. Paradise Regained
C. L’Allegro
D. Lycidas
A. Paradise lost
B. Paradise Regained
C. L’Allegro
D. Lycidas
A. 41
B. 40
C. 44
D. 42
A. Book 9
B. Book 12
C. Book 7
D. Book 11
A. Book 9
B. Book 12
C. Book 7
D. Book 11
A. 1667
B. 1668
C. 1669
D. 1770
A. Lycidas
B. Paradise lost
C. L’Allegro
D. Areopagitica
A. Dryden
B. Milton
C. Donne
D. Richard Lovelace
A. Marlowe
B. Shakespeare
C. Ben Johnson
D. Thomas Kyd
A. The Tempest
B. Macbeth
C. Hamlet
D. Romeo and Juliet
A. Polonius
B. Ophelia
C. Laertes
D. King Claudius
A. A Mid-Summer Night’s Dream
B. Macbeth
C. The Tempest
D. Romeo and Juliet
A. Hamlet
B. Macbeth
C. The Tempest
D. Romeo and Juliet
A. Hamlet
B. Laertes
C. Ophelia
D. King Claudius
A. Of Study
B. Of Truth
C. Of Ambition
D. Of Adversity
A. 57
B. 56
C. 10
D. 58
A. 1597
B. 1596
C. 1600
D. 1599
A. Milton
B. John Donne
C. Christopher Marlowe
D. Philip Sidney
A. Francis Bacon
B. Bertrand Russell
C. Jonathan Swift
D. Daniel Defoe
A. Zodiac signs
B. Twelve Months of the year
C. Twelve Apostles
D. None of these
A. Socrates
B. Aristotle
C. Sophocles
D. Plato
A. 13
B. 14
C. 15
D. 12
A. 10 Books
B. 12 Books
C. 7 Books
D. 6 Books
A. Amoretti
B. Epithalamion
C. The Faerie Queene
D. Prothalamion
A. Una
B. Duessa
C. Gloriana
D. None of these
A. Sir Walter Raleigh
B. Elizabeth Raleigh
C. Francis Drake
D. Humphrey Gilbert
A. Romeo and Juliet
B. Macbeth
C. The Tempest
D. Hamlet
A. Dr. Faustus
B. Jew of Malta
C. Tamburlaine The Great
D. Edward II
A. Astrophel and Stella
B. The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia
C. Apologie for Poetrie
D. Arcadia
A. School of Abuse
B. The Trumpet of Warre
C. The Ephemerides of Phialo
D. None of these
A. Spenser
B. Donne
C. Philip Sidney
D. George Herbert
A. John Milton
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. Philip Sidney
D. William Blake
A. As You Like It
B. Hamlet
C. Macbeth
D. Tempest
A. May
B. April
C. September
D. October
A. Astrology
B. Medicine
C. Psychology
D. None of these
A. Marlowe and Shakespeare in collaboration
B. Sackville and Norton in collaboration
C. Ben Jonson and Thomas Kyd in collaboration
D. Thomas Nashe
A. Nicholas Udall
B. Ben Jonson
C. Thomas Kyd
D. John Marston
A. 1516
B. 1551
C. 1555
D. 1560
A. 88
B. 87
C. 86
D. 82
A. Wyatt and Surrey
B. John Donne
C. Edmund Spenser
D. Sir Philip Sydney
A. John Lydgate
B. John Gower
C. William Langland
D. Thomas Hoccleve
A. Thomas Hoccleve
B. Henry Scogan
C. Ralph Strode
D. Geoffrey Chaucer
A. Squire
B. Knight
C. Parson
D. The Host
A. City
B. Village
C. Street
D. Town
A. Poetry
B. Prose
C. Drama
D. None of these
A. Four
B. Two
C. Three
D. One
A. Shrine of St. Thomas Becket
B. Monastery of Our Old Lady of Mount Grace
C. Our Lady of Willesden
D. None of these
A. Harry Bailly
B. Carry Baily
C. James Baily
D. Stephen Miller
A. 7
B. 6
C. 4
D. 8
A. 2
B. 4
C. 3
D. 5
A. 28
B. 21
C. 29
D. 24
A. Charles Dickens
B. Marlowe
C. Ben Johnson
D. William Shakespeare
A. John Gower
B. Walter William Skeat
C. William Langland
D. None of these
A. Love in Several Masques
B. The Tragedy of Tragedies
C. Tom Thumb
D. The Temple Beau
A. James Joyce
B. Franz Kafka
C. William Butler Yeats
D. Samuel Beckett
A. Madame Bovary
B. L’éducation Sentimentale
C. Three Tales
D. A Simple Heart
A. Daniel Defoe
B. Robert Louis Stevenson
C. Jonathan Swift
D. Mark Twain
A. Immaturity
B. Pygmalion
C. The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Socialism and Capitalism
D. An Unsocial Socialist
A. Franklin Evans or The Inebriate
B. Democratic Vistas
C. Life and Adventures of Jack Engle
D. Memoranda during the war
A. Jude the Obscure
B. Far from the Madding Crowd
C. The Return of the Native
D. The Mayor of Casterbridge
A. Dream of Four to Middling Women
B. Waiting for Godot
C. Endgame
D. Happy Days
A. Heinrich Mann
B. Thomas Mann
C. Klaus Mann
D. Erika Mann
A. 1879
B. 1880
C. 1883
D. 1900
A. Henrik Ibsen
B. H. G. Wells
C. Samuel Beckett
D. G.B Shaw
A. Between the Acts
B. To the Lighthouse
C. Mrs. Dalloway
D. The Waves
A. Aeneid
B. Beowulf
C. Iliad
D. Georgics
A. George Bernard Shaw
B. H. G. Wells
C. Samuel Beckett
D. William Shakespeare
A. John Caryll
B. Jonathon Swift
C. Thomas Parnell
D. John Arbuthnot
A. Ben Johnson
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. Alexander Pope
D. George Chapman
A. John Milton
B. John Dryden
C. Alexander Pope
D. John Donne
A. Jonathan Swift
B. Robert Louis Stevenson
C. Daniel Defoe
D. Henry Fielding
A. Fyodor Dostoevsky
B. Anton Chekhov
C. Leo Tolstoy
D. Nikolai Gogol
A. 1890
B. 1889
C. 1885
D. 1900
A. Oscar Wilde
B. Mark Twain
C. Allan Poe
D. Jack London
A. Sigurd Ibsen
B. August Strindberg
C. Henrik Ibsen
D. Edvard Grieg
A. Adam Bede
B. Middle March
C. The Mill on the Floss
D. Romola
A. The Flea
B. The Sun Rising
C. The Anniversary
D. The Canonization
A. David Hume
B. John Locke
C. Immanuel Kant
D. George Berkley
A. Love and Hate
B. Lust and Passion
C. Love and Religion
D. Wisdom and Courage
A. William Wordsworth
B. John Keats
C. William Blake
D. Shelley
A. 1821
B. 1822
C. 1833
D. 1819
A. Lord Byron
B. Percy Bysshe Shelley
C. William Wordsworth
D. William Blake
A. Jawaharlal Nehru
B. Harilal Gandhi
C. Mohandas k. Gandhi
D. Ramdas Gandhi
A. Beowulf
B. Aeneid
C. Metamorphoses
D. Dionysiaca
A. Han Solo
B. Princess Leia
C. Yoda
D. Palpatine
A. Samuel Johnson
B. John Milton
C. Alexander Pope
D. James Boswell
A. Macbeth
B. Romeo and Juliet
C. Julius Caesar
D. The Tempest
A. Shakespeare
B. Christopher Marlowe
C. John Fletcher
D. Thomas Kyd
A. Iron : Metal
B. North Pole : Directions
C. Magnetism : Attraction
D. Dust : Desert
A. Curtail : Activity
B. Expunge : Book
C. Edit : Text
D. Censor : Play
A. She will be praised very much by you.
B. She will be praised very much by you.
C. She will being praised very much by you.
D. She will been praised very much by you.
A. Exercise are taken daily by me.
B. Exercise is taken daily by me.
C. Exercise is being taken daily by me.
D. Exercise is been taken daily by me.
A. I will invited by her.
B. I shall be invited by her.
C. I shall being invited by her.
D. I will been invited by her.
A. Was a zoo being visited by you?
B. Was a zoo be visited by you?
C. Was a zoo been visited by you?
D. Was a zoo visited by you?
A. Have a rest been taken by you?
B. Have a rest taken by you?
C. Had a rest taken by you?
D. Have a rest be take by you?
A. Your parents must obeyed by you.
B. Your parents must been obeyed by you.
C. Your parents must be obeyed by you.
D. Your parents must being obeyed by you.
A. Is a match being played against our team by them?
B. Is a match be played against our team by them?
C. Is a match played against our team by them?
D. Is a match been played against our team by them?
A. I remember I was taken to the museum by my sister.
B. I remember being taken to the museum by my sister.
C. I remember myself being taken to the museum by my sister.
D. I remember taken to the museum by my sister.
A. Who has been created this mess?
B. By whom has this mess been created?
C. By whom this mess is being created?
D. By whom is this mess being created?
A. Every morning i was greeted cheerfully.
B. I am greeted cheerfully by them every morning.
C. I am being greeted cheerfully by them every morning.
D. Cheerful greeting is done by them every morning to me.
A. about
B. of
C. in
D. on
A. of
B. in
C. about
D. on
A. of
B. in
C. about
D. for
A. of
B. on
C. about
D. in
A. of
B. on
C. about
D. in
A. for
B. from
C. to
D. None of these
A. about
B. in
C. from
D. of
A. of
B. on
C. about
D. in
A. on
B. to
C. at
D. from
A. by
B. at
C. upon
D. from
A. Contagious
B. Infectious
C. Unanimous
D. Fatal
A. Flexible
B. Resilient
C. Supple
D. Brittle
A. Contagious
B. Infectious
C. Fatal
D. Incurable
A. Eavesdrop
B. Overhearing
C. Pigeonholing
D. Spying
A. Bourgeois
B. Insomnist
C. Ventriloquist
D. Somniloquist
A. Cuckold
B. Despotism
C. Plagiarism
D. Epicure
A. Itinerant
B. Mendicant
C. Journeyman
D. Tramp
A. Particle
B. Sibilant
C. Syllable
D. Letter
A. Intelligent
B. Ignorant
C. Credulous
D. Colleague
A. Startling
B. Murmuration
C. Both A & B
D. None of these
A. Aborigines
B. Citizens
C. Natives
D. Primitive
A. Bent
B. Devious
C. Regular
D. Atypical
A. Cramp
B. Prolong
C. Chop
D. Clip
A. Inexpert
B. Acute
C. Active
D. Able
A. Pliable
B. Pliant
C. Quiet
D. Unyielding
A. Homespun
B. Cheerful
C. Inelegant
D. Sincere
A. Hurt
B. Irk
C. Joy
D. Huff
A. Apathy
B. Nerve
C. Initiative
D. Sagacity
A. Hermetic
B. Manifest
C. Pedantic
D. Occult
A. Fragile
B. Weak
C. Tiny
D. Soft
A. Red
B. Solid
C. Truthful
D. Natural
A. Congest
B. Conclude
C. Convert
D. Condense
A. Representative
B. Officer
C. Member
D. Servant
A. Serenity
B. Laxity
C. Active
D. Bold
A. Very fat
B. Very thin
C. Very small
D. Very heavy
A. Direct
B. Strong
C. Cyclic
D. Weak
A. Question
B. Puzzle
C. Answer
D. Content
A. Dishonest
B. Honest
C. Reliable
D. Unreliable
A. Abuse
B. Appreciate
C. Copy
D. Encourage
A. Happy
B. Jubilant
C. Irritation
D. Curious
A. Small
B. Short
C. Little
D. Limited
A. Verbal
B. Written
C. Aural
D. Inhaling
A. A hair’s breadth
B. By the skin of teeth
C. Narrow escape
D. All of these
A. Remunerate
B. Clear
C. Balance
D. Misappropriate
A. Sequential
B. Congruous
C. Contradictory
D. Understandable
A. Nadir
B. Peak
C. Flourishing
D. Golden time
A. Aristocrat
B. Blue blood
C. Sophisticated
D. Rouge
A. Intelligent
B. Energetic
C. Observant
D. Watchful
A. Shrewd
B. Intelligence
C. Ninny
D. Wisdom
A. Ugly
B. Disgusting
C. Terrible
D. Graceful
A. Reflexive
B. Reciprocal
C. Both A and B
D. None of these
A. Novelist
B. Short story-writer
C. Lecturer
D. Ambassador
A. Byron
B. Shelley
C. Keats
D. Wordsworth
A. You will be surprised to know if I tell you who called me last night.
B. You will be surprised to know if I tell you whom called me last night.
C. You will be surprised to know if I tell you what called me last night.
D. You will be surprised to know if I tell you that who called me last night
A. Flexibility
B. Issues
C. Benefits
D. Pros and cons
A. For, while
B. While, for
C. For, while
D. Of, while
A. Conceited
B. Humble
C. Progressive
D. Noble
A. Between, over
B. of, for
C. Between, for
D. To, Is
A. a water
B. a bird
C. a missile
D. an arrow
A. Plot complications
B. Excessive Suspense
C. Humorous characters
D. Hyperbole
A. Life
B. Death
C. Life-in-Death
D. Death-in-Life
A. Henry VIII
B. James I
C. Elizabeth
D. Tudor
A. Morality plays
B. Tragic plays
C. Comic play
D. Absurd plays
A. Theatre of Absurd
B. Morality plays
C. Tragic plays
D. Comedy
A. Defect
B. Part of a larger method or technique
C. Main method
D. Efficient method
A. Translation Method
B. Deductive
C. Inductive
D. Elective
A. The Tempest
B. The Winter’s Tale
C. Romeo and Juliet
D. Rape of the lock
A. Spenserian sonnet
B. Shakespearean sonnet
C. Petrarchan Sonnet
D. None of these
A. Alice
B. Madam Eglantine
C. Julia
D. Sylvia
A. Arthur Miller
B. Inge Morath
C. James Dougherty
D. Marilyn Munroe
A. Nicholas Hughes
B. Ted Hughes
C. Virginia Woolf
D. Walt Whitman
A. Anaphora
B. Conceit
C. Allegory
D. Repetition
A. Justification of God’s ways to man
B. The cunningness of the Satan
C. The Human weakness
D. God’s Authority
A. L’Allegro
B. Lycidas
C. Paradise Lost
D. Paradise Regained
A. 1948
B. 1947
C. 1946
D. 1956
A. New kind of literature in former colonies
B. Travelogue
C. Biography
D. Autobiography
A. Blake
B. Wordsworth
C. John Keats
D. S.T. Coleridge
A. Upon Westminster Bridge
B. The Reverie of Poor Susan
C. London, 1802
D. The Prelude
A. Religion
B. Childhood memories
C. Social norms
D. Philosophy
A. 1816 to 1819
B. 1817
C. 1818
D. 1819
A. Shakespeare
B. Zuno
C. Stoicism
D. None of these
A. Thou still unravish’d bride of quietness
B. O mysterious priest
C. A pious morn
D. Silken Flank
A. Coleridge
B. John Keats
C. Blake
D. Wordsworth
A. 17th
B. 18th
C. 19th
D. 20th
A. Pun
B. Imagery
C. Epigram
D. Witticism
A. 50
B. 15
C. 12
D. 11
A. Guina
B. Nora
C. Rebecca
D. Hedda
A. H.G Wells
B. Marlowe
C. Ibsen
D. Shakespeare
A. Adonis
B. The Cenci
C. Queen Mab
D. Zastrozzi
A. The Bolsheviks
B. Lenin
C. Dostoevsky
D. None of these
A. Classics
B. Neo classics
C. Romantics
D. Pre romantics
A. George Eliot
B. Jane Austen
C. Thomas Hardy
D. Charles Dickens
A. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan
B. Frost at Midnight and A Friend
C. Hymn Before Sunrise and Monody on the Death of Chatterton
D. None of these
A. Birches
B. Stopping by the woods
C. Nothing Gold Can Stay
D. Mending Wall
A. 152
B. 153
C. 154
D. 155
A. Keats and Coleridge
B. Keats and Wordsworth
C. Shelley and Coleridge
D. Coleridge and Wordsworth
A. Mustafa Kamal
B. Greek war
C. Persian war
D. None of these
A. Nasal
B. Glottal
C. Bilabial
D. Labio-dental
A. Structuralism
B. Functionalism
C. Behaviorism
D. Cognitive
A. Dialect
B. Idiolect
C. Creole
D. Diglossia
A. Dialect
B. Idiolect
C. Diglossia
D. Pidgin
A. Dialect
B. Registers
C. Isogloss
D. Idiolect
A. Speaker oriented
B. Subject oriented
C. Epistemic
D. All of these
A. Clause
B. Phrase
C. Idiom
D. Sentence
A. Word
B. Clause
C. Phrase
D. Sentence
A. Single minimum free utterance
B. Single free utterance, not minimum but expanded
C. Free utterances
D. All of these
A. Idiom
B. Compound
C. Phrase
D. Clause
A. Plosives or stops
B. Articulations
C. Allophonic variations
D. None of these
A. Phonetics
B. Phonology
C. Anthropology
D. Linguistics
A. Auditory phonetics
B. Acoustic phonetics
C. Articulatory phonetics
D. None of these
A. Le language
B. Language
C. Parole
D. None of these
A. Synchronic or descriptive linguistic
B. Diachronic or historical linguistic
C. Both of these
D. None of these
A. Stems
B. Morphemes
C. Suffixes
D. Prefixes
A. Coleridge
B. Keats
C. Milton
D. Spencer
A. Igneous
B. Pressurized
C. Cooled
D. Polished
A. philanthropist, a cure
B. righteous, a medicine
C. sympathetic, understanding
D. tyrant, lovely
A. Scandalous, Compromise
B. Controversial, strengthen
C. Literary, Enlighten
D. Informative, test
A. Home, Heart
B. Books, Reality
C. Isolation, Communities
D. Misery, Society
A. Cousins
B. Husband and wife
C. Siblings
D. Friends
A. William Shakespeare
B. Sylvia Plath
C. Allan Poe
D. Emily Dickinson
A. Conceit
B. Hyperbole
C. illusion
D. Analogy
A. Robert Browning
B. Arthur Hallam
C. Alfred Tennyson
D. Hallam Tennyson
A. illegible
B. Stutter
C. Fluent
D. Incongruous
A. Wise
B. Rational
C. Foolish
D. Scholar
A. Irrational
B. Reasonable
C. Cautious
D. Meticulous
A. Elongate
B. Increment
C. Shorten
D. Widen
A. Stony
B. Obstinate
C. Submissive
D. Granitic
A. Calm
B. Collected
C. Embarrassed
D. Indifferent
A. External
B. Outside
C. International
D. Interior
A. Impulsive
B. Whimsical
C. Recollect
D. Fickle
A. Straightforward
B. Unscrupulous
C. Shy
D. Blunt
A. 10 years
B. 9 years
C. 6 years
D. 10 years
A. Robert Stewart
B. King James
C. Norman
D. Alfred
A. 1065
B. 1067
C. 1066
D. 956
A. Far from the madding crowd
B. Jude of the Obscure
C. The mayor of Casterbridge
D. The return of the native
A. Clipping
B. Borrowing
C. Coinage
D. Conversion
A. Modern age
B. Renaissance
C. Medieval age
D. Romantic age
A. Twelfth Night
B. Tempest
C. Othello
D. King Lear
A. Portia
B. Cordelia
C. Sylvia
D. Ophelia
A. Feminine trait
B. Masculine trait
C. Euphorian trait
D. Eunuch trait
A. Pacific
B. Arabian
C. Atlantic
D. Mediterranean
A. Ben Johnson
B. Dryden
C. John Webster
D. George Chapman
A. The Jew of Malta
B. Dr. Faustus
C. Tamburlaine
D. Edward ||
A. Classical antiquity
B. Medievalism
C. Modernism
D. Renaissance
A. 14th
B. 15th
C. 13th
D. 12th
A. Tennyson
B. Coleridge
C. Herbert
D. Byron
A. Medicine
B. lawyer
C. Economist
D. Engineer
A. Catholicism
B. Protestant
C. Restorationism
D. Anabaptism
A. Papa
B. Jonny
C. Adam
D. Nick
A. 44
B. 45
C. 56
D. 43
A. Swan
B. Columbidae
C. Albatross
D. Eagle
A. Swift
B. Bacon
C. Russell
D. William congreve
A. Alliteration
B. Assonance
C. Allegory
D. Metaphor
A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Eliot
D. Marlowe
A. Mountain Interval
B. A Boy’s Will
C. North of Boston
D. New Hampshire
A. Henry Fielding
B. Smollett
C. Samuel Richardson
D. Lawrence sterne
A. Adonis
B. To a skylark
C. Ode to the west wind
D. Queen Mab
A. Marriage hunt
B. Elizabeth’s judgment
C. First Impressions
D. Discrimination
A. William Blake
B. Catherine Blake
C. John Milton
D. John Keats
A. Byron
B. Shelley
C. Wordsworth
D. Keats
A. Irony
B. Satire
C. Hyperbole
D. Aphorism
A. Jeremy Bentham
B. Adam Smith
C. J.S. Mill
D. John Locke
A. W.B. Yeats
B. Ezra pound
C. T.S Eliot
D. Valerie Eliot
A. Augusten
B. Ciceronian period
C. Age of reason
D. Romantics
A. Macbeth
B. Hamlet
C. The Merchant of Venice
D. The Tempest
A. Humanism
B. Existentialism
C. Idealism
D. Empiricism
A. Theme
B. Genre
C. Central idea
D. Paradigm
A. Tragic play
B. Reconciliation play
C. Romantic play
D. Satirical play
A. 16th century
B. 13th century
C. 17th century
D. 15th century
A. Novel
B. Prose
C. Poetry
D. Drama
A. 1662
B. 1667
C. 1669
D. 1600
A. Prosperity
B. Inventions
C. Civil war
D. Critical thinking
A. 1608
B. 1604
C. 1603
D. 1605
A. 1540-1600
B. 1550-1660
C. 1510-1600
D. 1600-1700
A. Serious
B. Humorous poet
C. Satirical
D. both a and b
A. Modern
B. Romantics
C. Enlightenment
D. Conservative
A. 25
B. 40
C. 35
D. 20
A. Three
B. Four
C. Two
D. Five
A. Thomas Hardy
B. Hubert parry
C. George Meredith
D. Hubert Bancroft
A. George Orwell
B. H.G. Wells
C. Jules verne
D. Orson Welles
A. Unification of soul
B. Unification of thoughts
C. Unification of senses
D. Unification of people
A. T.S. Eliot
B. W.B.Yeats
C. James Joyce
D. John Keats
A. Donne
B. Milton
C. Herbet
D. Marvell
A. Christopher Marlowe
B. John Dryden
C. Ben Johnson
D. John Webster
A. Thomas Hardy
B. Virginia Woolf
C. Leonardo Woolf
D. Vanessa Bell
A. French
B. Italian
C. Greek
D. Spanish
A. Joseph Losey
B. Pinter
C. Hall
D. Fraser
A. Christopher Marlowe
B. John Dryden
C. John Webster
D. Ben johnson
A. Greek
B. Spanish
C. Latin
D. French
A. Study of sound system
B. Study of words formation
C. Study of structure
D. Study of meanings
A. Consonant
B. Diphthongs
C. Vowel
D. Plosives
A. One
B. Three
C. Two
D. Four
A. New Zealand
B. England
C. Australia
D. America
B. England
A. Christopher Marlowe
B. Sheridan
C. Ben johnson
D. John Webster
A. William Carlos
B. T.S. Eliot
C. Ezra Pound
D. Gertrude Stein
A. American poet
B. Russian poet
C. British poet
D. French poet
A. Milan
B. Galena
C. Quincy
D. Illinois
A. A city
B. A continent
C. A country (An ancient roman place’s name)
D. A class
A. Emile Bronte
B. George Eliot
C. Thomas Hardy
D. Charles Dickson
A. John Donne
B. Spencer
C. Milton
D. Sidney
A. Alliteration
B. Consonance
C. Assonance
D. Anaphora
A. At
B. For
C. Again
D. From
A. Plosives
B. Fricative
C. Articulations
D. Allophonic
A. Speech errors
B. Plosives
C. Fricatives
D. Jargon
A. Archaic
B. Whimsical
C. Mild
D. Graceful
A. Obscenity
B. Violence
C. Abnormality
D. Heresy
A. Heroic tragedy
B. Classical tragedy
C. Domestic tragedy
D. Shakespearean tragedy
A. Madras
B. Malgudi
C. Trivandrum
D. Mano Majra
A. Fancy
B. Imagination
C. Prose
D. Poetic diction
A. Miltonism
B. Dramatic quality
C. Pictorial element
D. Elegiac nature
A. Linguistic Universals
B. Relative scripts
C. Universal script
D. Linguistic nodes
A. Babbling
B. Holophrastic
C. Cooing
D. Telegraphic
A. 36
B. 37
C. 38
D. 39
A. Bartlett
B. Piaget
C. Hermann paul
D. Chomsky
A. Hair’s breadth
B. By the skin of one’s teeth
C. Narrow escape
D. To apply economy
A. Romantic
B. Victorian
C. Transition
D. Edwardian
A. Ben Jonson
B. Shakespeare
C. John Webster
D. Thomas Middleton
A. Antonyms
B. Homonyms
C. Synonyms
D. Hyponymy
A. Universe
B. Soul
C. Mind
D. Heaven
B. Soul
A. Lady Chatterley’s Lover
B. Sons and lovers
C. The trespasser
D. The Boy in the Bush
A. The Study of names
B. The Study of origins of words
C. The Study of language problems
D. The Study of sounds similar to one another
A. Worldly Wisdom
B. diplomatic matters
C. state affairs
D. General knowledge
A. Worldly Wisdom
A. Hardy
B. Henry James
C. Arnold Bennet
D. John Galsworthy
A. Emerson
B. Oliver Wendelt Holmes
C. Fenimore Cooper
D. Walt Whitman
A. 1st
B. 2nd
C. 3rd
D. 4th
A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Gray
D. Wordsworth
A. Jane Eyre
B. Shirley
C. Wuthering Heights
D. Agnes Gray
A. Satirical
B. Narrative
C. Allegorical
D. Descriptive
A. Bifer Eliot
B. Mary Ann Evans
C. T.S Eliot
D. Emily Dickson
A. Verisimilitude
B. Wit
C. Threnody
D. Tract
A. Nasal
B. Uvula
C. Velum
D. Bilabial
A. Sir Edmund Goose
B. W. B. Yeats
C. Edmund Thomson
D. Rabindranath Tagore
A. New Signature
B. New lines
C. New Romantics
D. New Apocalypse
A. South Literary messenger
B. Evening Post
C. South American Reviewer
D. The Autobiography
A. Block style writing
B. Moveable type
C. Calgraphy
D. Computer
A. Law and rule to observation
B. Observation
C. Generalization to specification
D. Examples and illustrations
A. Marlowe
B. Donne
C. Spencer
D. Johnson
A. Greek
B. Indian
C. Persian
D. Roman
A. Novella
B. Novelle
C. Novelette
D. Noval
A. Oblique narration
B. Stream of consciousness
C. First-person narration
D. Naturalism
A. Banishment
B. Everlasting shame
C. Conversion to Christianity
D. Mild melancholia
A. Sir Thomas More
B. Martin Luther
C. John Tetzel
D. Erasmus
A. Romantic playwright
B. University wits
C. Elizabethan dramatists
D. Court playwright
A. The era of good feelings
B. The revolution of thought
C. The Renaissance
D. The scientific explosion
A. Swinburne
B. Rossetti
C. Hopkins
D. Hardy
A. Eugene O’Neill
B. Tennessee Williams
C. Arthur Miller
D. Tennyson
A. Valdes and Cornelius
B. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
C. Troilus Cressida
D. Pyramus Thisbe
A. Phonology
B. Phonetic substances
C. Phonetics
D. Semantics
A. Bye, Bye, Blackbird
B. Voices In The City
C. Cry, the peacock
D. A Goddess named gold
A. Satire
B. Sensuality
C. Avoid
D. Reform
A. Between speech pattern
B. Between native and foreign languages
C. Between parents voices
D. Between tone and pitch
A. Phonetic
B. Semantics
C. Pragmatic
D. Syntax
A. Across
B. Besides
C. Beside
D. Over
A. Eric Amber
B. Eric Blair
C. Torn Scott
D. Winston Smith
A. Novel
B. Short story
C. Play
D. Work of literary criticism
A. The new cultural identity of colonies
B. Travelogues
C. Biographies
D. Autobiography
A. Byron
B. Scott
C. Keats
D. Shelley
A. He was shocked when she told him that who called her last night.
B. He was shocked when she told him whom called her last night.
C. He was shocked when she told him what called him last night.
D. He was shocked when she told him who called her last night.
A. Monika Verma
B. Sunita Nam Joshi
C. Kamala Das
D. Mamta Kaka
A. Cotton Mather
B. Sara Om Jiweti
C. Harriet Beecher Stowe
D. Willa Cather
A. Edgar Allen poe
B. Agatha Christie
C. Arthur Conan Doyle
D. John Lehrenn
A. Anthony Hope
B. Anthony Powell
C. Anthony Trollope
D. Virginia Woolf
A. The Jesuits
B. The Baptists
C. The protestants
D. the Calvinists
A. Picaresque novels
B. Sentimental novels
C. Comic Epic in prose
D. Realistic novel
A. Morphology
B. Semantics
C. Phonology
D. Syntax
A. Cancer
B. Pneumonia
C. Tuberculosis
D. Malaria
A. Danish
B. Norwegian
C. Icelandic
D. Swedish
A. Accuracy
B. Fluency
C. Appropriateness
D. Listening Skills
A. Teachers must require students to practice their listening skills every day so that students see improvement.
B. Students slowly become aware of how strong their accents are which motivates them to practice pronunciation more.
C. Students gain an understanding of place and manner of articulation when pronouncing words
D. Teachers should not overtly correct students pronunciation errors in order to keep the student’s affective filter low
A. Coherence
B. Cohesion
C. Co-operative
D. conversation
A. The Angles, Celts and jutes
B. The Angles, Saxons, Vikings
C. The Angles, Saxons, jutes
D. The Angles, Saxons, Celt
A. A man who failed
B. The God of Small Things
C. Apes of God
D. The nude before God
A. Pope
B. Doctor Johnson
C. DeQuincey
D. Coleridge
A. Washington Irving
B. John Fenimore Cooper
C. Nathaniel Hawthorne
D. Edgar Allen Poe
A. Nasal
B. Affricate
C. Glottal
D. Bilabial
A. Romance
B. Germanic
C. Celtic
D. American
A. Utopia
B. Arcadia
C. Hydriotaphia
D. Lamia
A. The Anglo-Saxon conquest beginning in the 1450s
B. The Norman conquest of 1066
C. The dissolution of monasteries in the 1530s
D. The wave of Contempt for manuscripts that followed the beginning of printing in 1476
A. Narrative
B. Epic
C. Lyric
D. Satirical
A. Connotation
B. Collocation
C. Implication
D. Location
A. David page
B. Anthony Mercy
C. Mark Horigabaum
D. Mark Bloomberg
A. 12th
B. 13th
C. 15th
D. 16th
A. Are parasites
B. Depend on animals as a source of carbon
C. Are incapable of photosynthesis
D. Obtain supplemental nitrogen from animals
A. James Watson
B. Samuel Morse
C. Edward Jenner
D. Louis Pasteur
A. Edison
B. Thomson
C. Bardeen
D. Faraday
A. Badminton
B. Squash
C. Tennis
D. Polo
A. Hong Kong
B. Russia
C. Australia
D. Germany
A. North America
B. Europe
C. South America
D. Africa
A. Muslim and Jews
B. Muslims and non- Arabs
C. Muslims and Jews and other non-Muslims
D. None of these
A. Hamza ibne Abbas
B. Abdullah ibne Abbas
C. Talha ibne Abbas
D. None of these
A. Ctrl + Alt + Enter
B. Ctrl + shift + Enter
C. Alt + shift + Enter
D. Alt + Space + Enter
A. Home
B. Layout
C. References
D. Insert
A. 3
B. 2/7
C. ½
D. 13
A. 40
B. 50
C. 20
D. 80
A. Porous
B. Hard
C. Rough
D. Brittle
A. Germany
B. France
C. Italy
D. THE UK
A. Ziarat
B. Murree
C. Sawat
D. Ayubia
A. Gandhi
B. Nehru
C. Keshab Chandra Sen
D. None of these
A. Ben Johnson
B. Washington Allston
C. T.S.Eliot
D. James Joyce
A. Plato
B. Philip Sydney
C. Aristotle
D. T. S. Eliot
A. William Blake
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. William Wordsworth
D. T.S. Eliot
A. Shakespeare
B. Mathew Arnold
C. John Keats
D. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
A. Auguste Comte
B. Samuel Beckett
C. Jean-Paul Sartre
D. None of the above
A. Lord Byron
B. Dryden
C. Samuel Johnson
D. John Donne
A. Raymond Williams
B. T.S Eliot
C. Charles Lamb
D. Catherine Belsey
A. Auguste Comte
B. Samuel Johnson
C. T.S Eliot
D. Ezra Pound
A. Homi K. Bhabha
B. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
C. Andrew James
D. None of the above
A. Jeremy Bentham
B. John Stuart Mill
C. Karl Marx
D. None of the above
A. Jeremy Bentham
B. John Stuart Mill
C. Karl Marx
D. None of the above
A. Anne Bronte
B. Mary Westmacott
C. Maya Angelo
D. Dorris Lessing
A. Douglas Spaulding
B. Thomas Moore
C. Francis Bacon
D. François-Marie Arouet
A. Philip Sidney
B. Harry Porter
C. William Sydney Porter
D. Non of the above
A. Charles Dickens
B. Thomas Hardy
C. Earnest Hemingway
D. George Eliot
A. Arthur Miller
B. Tony Blair
C. Eric Arthur Blair
D. Enrique Blair
A. George Eliot
B. T.S.Eliot
C. Anne Moor
D. Non of the above
A. Charles Dickens
B. Charles Lamb
C. Henry Fielding
D. Henry James
A. Anne
B. Acton Bell
C. Emila
D. Currer Bell
A. Graham Bell
B. Acton Bell
C. Elia
D. Currer Bell
A. Emily Bronte
B. Charlotte Bronte
C. Anne Bronte
D. Jane Austen
A. Name of a tree
B. Beautiful feather
C. Name that a writer uses instead of his or her real name
D. None of above