Tag: techniques of style
Questions Related to techniques of style
Which of the following statement(s) is not a reason an author might choose to use parody?
State whether true or false:
The children were screaming and shouting in the fields.
'Screaming' and 'shouting' in the above-mentioned sentence appeal to our sense of hearing or auditory sense.
State whether true or false:
Parody is often confused with satire. Parody can be used to develop satire, in addition, parody and satire are not completely similar in meaning.
State whether the statement is True of False:
A parody intends to make fun of an original workits subject, author, style, or some other target by means of satiric or ironic imitation.
State whether the statement is true of false:
A parody does not always need to refer to the entire work it's parodying, but can instead pick and choose aspects of it to satirize, exaggerate, disparage, or mock.
State whether the statement is True of False:
The word "spoof" is somewhat more commonly used today than "parody," but they're essentially synonyms.
State whether the statement is True or False:
Parody can sometimes be satirical, and satires can sometimes utilize parodies.
Identify the literary style of the following passage:
Come ye to this twin-peaked slope of Parnassus with distant views, [where dancers are welcome], and [lead me in my songs], Pierian Goddesses who dwell on the snow-swept crags of Helicon. Sing in honour of Pythian Phoebus, golden-haired, skilled archer and musician, whom blessed Leto bore beside the celebrated marsh, grasping with her hands a sturdy branch of the grey-green olive tree in her time of travail.And the whole vault of heaven rejoiced, [cloudless and bright] and the air subdued to calmness the swift rushing of winds, and the [mighty] deep-thunderous swell of Nereus subsided, and great Oceanus who surrounds and embraces the earth with his waters.
And the Libyan aulos, pouring forth a honey-sweet sound, sings forth, mingling its delightful voice with the trilling melodies [of the cithara]; and Echo, who lives among the rocks, cries forth.
Identify the genre that the following passage belongs to:
Meliboeus.
You, Tityrus, 'neath a broad beech-canopy
Reclining, on the slender oat rehearse
Your silvan ditties: I from my sweet fields,
And home's familiar bounds, even now depart.
Exiled from home am I; while, Tityrus, you
Sit careless in the shade, and, at your call,
"Fair Amaryllis" bid the woods resound.
Tityrus.
O Meliboeus, 'twas a god vouchsafed
This ease to us, for him a god will I
Deem ever, and from my folds a tender lamb
Oft with its life-blood shall his altar stain.
His gift it is that, as your eyes may see,
My kine may roam at large,
Identify the literary device used in the following passage:
The Farmer
A farmer, bent on doubling the profits from his land,
Proceeded to set his soil a two-harvest demand.
Too intent thus on profit, harm himself he must needs:
Instead of corn, he now reaps corn cockle and weeds.