1. What is a parody?
A. a critical work that ridicules the faults of individuals, groups, or society
B. a work that focuses on everyday events to create humor
C. a work that imitates and exaggerates the qualities of another work or style for comic effect
D. a work that imitates and exaggerates the qualities of another work or style for tragic effect
2. Which of the following statements comparing parody and satire is true?
A. There is no significant difference between satire and parody.
B Parody mocks people's illogical or foolish behavior; satire mocks stuffy or ornate literary style.
C. The goal of parody is usually to entertain; the goal of satire is usually to correct the flaws it exposes.
D. Parody was more common in the eighteenth century; satire is more common in the twentieth century.
3. (1) The long night of hatred has ended; the bright day of understanding has begun. (2) It is a day that will not be denied, it is a day that will end centuries of bitterness and violence, it is a day that will help us find the better angels of our natures, it is a day that will end in the Promised Land.
Which answer choice correctly identifies the rhetorical devices used in the passage?
A. Sentence 1 uses anaphora and antithesis; sentence 2 uses imperatives and parallelism.
B. Sentence 1 uses anaphora and repetition; sentence 2 uses antithesis and parallelism.
C. Sentence 1 uses antithesis and parallelism; sentence 2 uses anaphora and repetition.
D. Sentence 1 uses anaphora and parallelism; sentence 2 uses antithesis and repetition.